The reduction of carbon dioxide represents an ambitious target, with potential impact on several of the United Nations’ sustainable development goals including climate action, renewable energy, sustainable cities, and communities. This process shares a common issue with other redox reactions involved in energy-related schemes (i.e., proton reduction to hydrogen and water oxidation to oxygen), that is, the need for a catalyst in order to proceed at sustainable rates. Moreover, the reduction of CO 2 faces an additional selectivity complication, since several products can be formed, including carbon monoxide, formic acid/formate, methanol, and methane. In this Mini-Review, we will discuss iron-based molecular catalysts that catalyze the reduction of CO 2 , focusing in particular on the selectivity of the processes, which is rationalized and guided on the basis of the reaction mechanism. Inspired by the active sites of carbon monoxide dehydrogenases, several synthetic systems have been proposed for the reduction of CO 2 ; these are discussed in terms of key intermediates such as iron hydrides or Fe-CO 2 adducts, where the ligand coordination motif, together with the presence of co-additives such as Brønsted acids, nucleophiles, or CO 2 trapping moieties, can guide the selectivity of the reaction. A mechanistic comparison is traced with heterogeneous iron single-atom catalysts. Perspectives on the use of molecular catalysts in devices for sustainable reduction of CO 2 are finally given.
Novel energy and atom efficiency processes will be keys to develop the sustainable chemical industry of the future. Electrification could play an important role, by allowing to fine-tune energy input...
The characterization of competent intermediates of metal complexes, involved in catalytic transformations for the activation of small molecules, is an important target for mechanistic comprehension and catalyst design. Iron complexes deserve particular attention, due to the rich chemistry of iron that allows their application both in oxidation and reduction processes. In particular, iron complexes with tetradentate Schiff base ligands show the possibility to electrochemically generate FeI intermediates, capable of reacting with carbon dioxide. In this work, we investigate the electronic and spectroscopic features of FeI intermediates in five Fe(LN2O2) complexes, and evaluate the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 in the presence of phenol (PhOH) or trifluoroethanol (TFE) as proton donors. The main findings include: (i) a correlation of the potentials of the FeII/I couples with the electronic character of the LN2O2 ligand and the energy of the metal-to-ligand charge transfer absorption of FeI species (determined by spectroelectrochemistry, SEC-UV/Vis); (ii) the reactivity of FeI species with CO2, as proven by cyclic voltammetry and SEC-UV/Vis; (iii) the identification of Fe(salen) as a competent homogeneous electrocatalyst for CO2 reduction to CO, in the presence of phenol or trifluoroethanol proton donors (an overpotential of 0.91 V, a catalytic rate constant estimated at 5 × 104 s−1, and a turnover number of 4); and (iv) the identification of sudden, ligand-assisted decomposition routes for complexes bearing a ketylacetoneimine pendant, likely associated with the protonation under cathodic conditions of the ligands.
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