Loading…

Mechanisms of Electrochemical N 2 Splitting by a Molybdenum Pincer Complex

Molybdenum complexes supported by tridentate pincer ligands are exceptional catalysts for dinitrogen fixation using chemical reductants, but little is known about their prospects for electrochemical reduction of dinitrogen. The viability of electrochemical N binding and splitting by a molybdenum(III...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Inorganic chemistry 2022-01, Vol.61 (4), p.2307-2318
Main Authors: Bruch, Quinton J, Malakar, Santanu, Goldman, Alan S, Miller, Alexander J M
Format: Article
Language:English
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Molybdenum complexes supported by tridentate pincer ligands are exceptional catalysts for dinitrogen fixation using chemical reductants, but little is known about their prospects for electrochemical reduction of dinitrogen. The viability of electrochemical N binding and splitting by a molybdenum(III) pincer complex, ( PNP)MoBr ( PNP = 2,6-bis( Bu PCH )-C H N)), is established in this work, providing a foundation for a detailed mechanistic study of electrode-driven formation of the nitride complex ( PNP)Mo(N)Br. Electrochemical kinetic analysis, optical and vibrational spectroelectrochemical monitoring, and computational studies point to two concurrent reaction pathways: In the reaction-diffusion layer near the electrode surface, the molybdenum(III) precursor is reduced by 2e and generates a bimetallic molybdenum(I) Mo (μ-N ) species capable of N-N bond scission; and in the bulk solution away from the electrode surface, over-reduced molybdenum(0) species undergo chemical redox reactions via comproportionation to generate the same bimetallic molybdenum(I) species capable of N cleavage. The comproportionation reactions reveal the surprising intermediacy of dimolybdenum(0) complex -[( PNP)Mo(N ) ](μ-N ) in N splitting pathways. The same "over-reduced" molybdenum(0) species was also found to cleave N upon addition of lutidinium, an acid frequently used in catalytic reduction of dinitrogen.
ISSN:0020-1669
1520-510X
DOI:10.1021/acs.inorgchem.1c03698