JOURNAL ARTICLE

Ligand-Controlled Product Selectivity in Electrochemical Carbon Dioxide Reduction Using Manganese Bipyridine Catalysts

Abstract

Electrocatalysis is a promising tool for utilizing carbon dioxide as a feedstock in the chemical industry. However, controlling the selectivity for different CO2 reduction products remains a major challenge. We report a series of manganese carbonyl complexes with elaborated bipyridine or phenanthroline ligands that can reduce CO2 to either formic acid, if the ligand structure contains strategically positioned tertiary amines, or CO, if the amine groups are absent in the ligand or are placed far from the metal center. The amine-modified complexes are benchmarked to be among the most active catalysts for reducing CO2 to formic acid, with a maximum turnover frequency of up to 5500 s-1 at an overpotential of 630 mV. The conversion even works at overpotentials as low as 300 mV, although through an alternative mechanism. Mechanistically, the formation of a Mn-hydride species aided by in situ protonated amine groups was determined to be a key intermediate by cyclic voltammetry, 1H NMR, DFT calculations, and infrared spectroelectrochemistry.

Keywords:
Chemistry Overpotential Formic acid Ligand (biochemistry) Catalysis Amine gas treating Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide Inorganic chemistry Cyclic voltammetry Protonation Selectivity Electrocatalyst Bipyridine Manganese Electrochemistry Combinatorial chemistry Photochemistry Organic chemistry Carbon monoxide Electrode Physical chemistry Crystal structure

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188
Cited By
6.66
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
67
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0.98
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Citation History

Topics

CO2 Reduction Techniques and Catalysts
Physical Sciences →  Energy →  Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Carbon dioxide utilization in catalysis
Physical Sciences →  Chemical Engineering →  Process Chemistry and Technology
Ionic liquids properties and applications
Physical Sciences →  Chemical Engineering →  Catalysis

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