化学
异氰
电化学
氨
固定(群体遗传学)
结扎
组合化学
有机化学
生物化学
电极
物理化学
内科学
基因
医学
作者
Jeremy E. Weber,Noah D. McMillion,Alexander S. Hegg,Ashlee E. Wertz,Mehrnaz Aliahmadi,Brandon Q. Mercado,Robert H. Crabtree,Hannah S. Shafaat,Alexander J. M. Miller,Patrick L. Holland
摘要
Transition-metal-mediated splitting of N2 to form metal nitride complexes could constitute a key step in electrocatalytic nitrogen fixation, if these nitrides can be electrochemically reduced to ammonia under mild conditions. The envisioned nitrogen fixation cycle involves several steps: N2 binding to form a dinuclear end-on bridging complex with appropriate electronic structure to cleave the N2 bridge followed by proton/electron transfer to release ammonia and bind another molecule of N2. The nitride reduction and N2 splitting steps in this cycle have differing electronic demands that a catalyst must satisfy. Rhenium systems have had limited success in meeting these demands, and studying them offers an opportunity to learn strategies for modulating reactivity. Here, we report a rhenium system in which the pincer supporting ligand is supplemented by an isocyanide ligand that can accept electron density, facilitating reduction and enabling the protonation/reduction of the nitride to ammonia under mild electrochemical conditions. The incorporation of isocyanide raises the N–H bond dissociation free energy of the first N–H bond by 10 kcal/mol, breaking the usual compensation between pKa and redox potential; this is attributed to the separation of the protonation site (nitride) and the reduction site (delocalized between Re and isocyanide). Ammonia evolution is accompanied by formation of a terminal N2 complex, which can be oxidized to yield bridging N2 complexes including a rare mixed-valent complex. These rhenium species define the steps in a synthetic cycle that converts N2 to NH3 through an electrochemical N2 splitting pathway, and show the utility of a second, tunable supporting ligand for enhancing nitride reactivity.
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