2024-03-29
The anticipated shortage of an increasing number of critical elements, especially metals, requires a shift toward molecularly defined materials with low metal loadings. More particularly, surface-anchored molecular catalysts are attractive to prospectively enable cost-effective electrochemical hydrogen evolution. However, the design of ligands integrating specific anchoring unit(s) for the immobilization of molecular catalysts can be challenging and has direct consequences for the intrinsic properties of the grafted complex. In this work, two cobalt tetraazamacrocyclic complexes bearing pyrene anchoring groups at different positions on the macrocyclic ligands were synthesized. The pyrene unit allows for simple immobilization and electrochemical characterization of the two complexes on multi-walled carbon nanotube-based electrodes. Thorough electrochemical and electrocatalytic investigation demonstrates important differences between the two closely related catalysts in terms of catalyst loading, catalytic response, and stability over time, with a significantly higher stability observed at pH 7 than at pH 2.
Article
Versió acceptada
Anglès
32 p.
ACS Publications
European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation program under grant agreement no. 765376 (eSCALED Marie Curie ITN project)
French National Research Agency (Labex ARCANE, CBH-EUR-GS, ANR-17-EURE-0003)
Ministry of Science and Innovation of Spain MICINN (PID2022-140143OB-I00 to AL, PID2021-128496OB-I00 and RYC2019-027423-I to CGS) and Severo Ochoa (CEX2019-000925-S).
Generalitat de Catalunya-AGAUR (2017SGR1631 and 2021SGR00064)
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