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Published December 16, 2013 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Synthetic Cluster Models of Biological and Heterogeneous Manganese Catalysts for O_2 Evolution

Abstract

Artificial photosynthesis has emerged as an important strategy toward clean and renewable fuels. Catalytic oxidation of water to O_2 remains a significant challenge in this context. A mechanistic understanding of currently known heterogeneous and biological catalysts at a molecular level is highly desirable for fundamental reasons as well as for the rational design of practical catalysts. This Award Article discusses recent efforts in synthesizing structural models of the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II. These structural motifs are also related to heterogeneous mixed-metal oxide catalysts. A stepwise synthetic methodology was developed toward achieving the structural complexity of the targeted active sites. A geometrically restricted multinucleating ligand, but with labile coordination modes, was employed for the synthesis of low-oxidation-state trimetallic species. These precursors were elaborated to site-differentiated tetrametallic complexes in high oxidation states. This methodology has allowed for structure−reactivity studies that have offered insight into the effects of different components of the clusters. Mechanistic aspects of oxygen-atom transfer and incorporation from water have been interrogated. Significantly, a large and systematic effect of redox-inactive metals on the redox properties of these clusters was discovered. With the pK_a value of the redox-inactive metal−aqua complex as a measure of the Lewis acidity, structurally analogous clusters display a linear dependence between the reduction potential and acidity; each pK_a unit shifts the potential by ca. 90 mV. Implications for the function of the biological and heterogeneous catalysts are discussed.

Additional Information

© 2013 American Chemical Society. Received: September 2, 2013; Published: December 16, 2013. We thank the California Institute of Technology, the Searle Scholars Program, NSF CAREER Grant CHE-1151918, NIH R01 GM102687A (to T.A.), a Sandia Campus Executive Fellowship (to E.Y.T.), and NSF Graduate Fellowships (to E.Y.T. and J.S.K.) for financial support. We are grateful to collaborators for insightful discussions and to colleagues and co-workers for a stimulating environment in which to do science at Caltech.

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