UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time,...

16
UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be performed in supercritical CO 2 Prof M. George / A. Cowan

Transcript of UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time,...

Page 1: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham

Long Term Utilisation

To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be performed in supercritical CO2

Prof M. George / A. Cowan

Page 2: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

Strategy for CO2 Reduction

• Reduction of CO2 requires energy

Photon as energy source (Photochem)

Electricity as energy source (Electrochem)

• One electron process is unfavorable

Multi-electron transfer catalysts

CO2 + e- CO2- E = 1.9 V (vs NHE at pH 7)

CO2 + H+ + 2e- HCO2- E = 0.49 V

CO2 + 2H+ + 2e- CO + H2O E = 0.53 V

CO2 + 6H+ + 6e- CH3OH + H2O E = 0.38 VComments Inorg. Chem. 1997, 19, 67Coord. Chem. Rev. 1999, 185, 373

Page 3: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

CO2 ReductionIf Nature Can Do It,

Why Can't We?

http://photoscience.la.asu.edu

Page 4: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

• Artificial photosynthesis for CO2 reduction typically requires a

photosensitizer, a catalyst and an electron donor

• Products are CO, formate, and H2

Page 5: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

Charge separation

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

+-

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

-

charge separationh

TEA

TEA+

• Co macrocycles

• Ni macrocycles

• Cobalt and Iron porphyrins,

Phthalocyanines and corroles

• Ru(bpy)2(CO)X

• Re(bpy)(CO)3X

• Ni(bpy)32+

Page 6: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

- CO, formate, carbonate are produced

- BUT: low turnover numbers, catalyst poisoning, by-products

George, M. W., et al. (1996) Organometallics 15, 3374-3387

Page 7: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

• Reaction of the catalytically active species with CO2 is very slow

• Solvent binds to the “vacant site”

-Low turnover numbers, catalyst poisoning, by-products

Hayashi, Y., Kita, S., Brunschwig, B. S. & Fujita, E. (2003) J. Am. Chem. Soc., 125, 11976-11987.

Page 8: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

•CO2 is the solvent and reagent

•Achieve solvent density comparable to conventional solvents

•Tuneable Properties

Why operate in scCO2 ?

Tc = 304 K

Pc= 72.9 atm

Page 9: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

• Problem: Most metal carbonyls are insoluble in non-polar solvents!

• Solution:

C9H19 chains

Soluble in non-polar solvents!

N

N

Re

ClOC

OC

OC

Page 10: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

8

8

Page 11: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

• Investigate photophysics/photochemistry in conventional solvents and scCO2

• Test catalytic ability of new complexes in scCO2

• Feedback into rational catalyst design

Page 12: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

PROBE SAMPLE DETECTOR

PUMP

IR

UV

TRIR Spectroscopy

Kinetic studies of mechanisms from picosecond (10-12 s) to seconds

2100 2050 2000 1950 1900 1850

OD = 0.052052

2022

1977

1951

1925

1906

50 ns

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

X

X

Re

N

NCl

CO

CO

CO

+-

X

X

charge separation

h

In n-heptane similar excited state to un-substituted complex

Page 13: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

v

Page 14: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

Conclusions• Solvent coordination is a problem in existing

Re-bpy CO2 reduction catalysts

• CO2 soluble analogue may overcome this problem – work in scCO2

• Currently examining mechanism with TRIR spectroscopy

• We will start testing catalytic ability shortly

Page 15: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

• Mike George

• Etsuko Fujita / Dave Grills

• John Gavey

Page 16: UKCCSC Meeting, 18 - 19 April 2007 Nottingham Long Term Utilisation To develop, for the first time, catalysts which allow photocatalytic reduction to be.

Future aims

• A fundamental challenge is the replacement of the “sacrificial” electron donors by species that will lead to useful (or benign) chemicals in their own right

– CO2 + 2H2O CH3OH + O2

– CO2 + CH4 CH3COOH

• If we can do this, then we can do what Nature does