Synthetic routes to salts containing uranium bis-imido tetrahalide anions [U(NR)(2)X(4)](2-) (X = Cl(-), Br(-)) and non-coordinating NEt(4)(+) and PPh(4)(+) countercations are reported. In general, these compounds can be prepared from U(NR)(2)I(2)(THF)(x) (x = 2 and R = (t)Bu, Ph; x = 3 and R = Me) upon addition of excess halide. In addition to providing stable coordination complexes with Cl(-), the [U(NMe)(2)](2+) cation also reacts with Br(-) to form stable [NEt(4)](2)[U(NMe)(2)Br(4)] complexes. These materials were used as a platform to compare electronic structure and bonding in [U(NR)(2)](2+) with [UO(2)](2+). Specifically, Cl K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and both ground-state and time-dependent hybrid density functional theory (DFT and TDDFT) were used to probe U-Cl bonding interactions in [PPh(4)](2)[U(N(t)Bu)(2)Cl(4)] and [PPh(4)](2)[UO(2)Cl(4)]. The DFT and XAS results show the total amount of Cl 3p character mixed with the U 5f orbitals was roughly 7-10% per U-Cl bond for both compounds, which shows that moving from oxo to imido has little effect on orbital mixing between the U 5f and equatorial Cl 3p orbitals. The results are presented in the context of recent Cl K-edge XAS and DFT studies on other hexavalent uranium chloride systems with fewer oxo or imido ligands.
A series of cobalt bis(benzenedithiolate) complexes with varying benzenedithiolate (general abbreviation: bdt) ring substitutions (SCX) were prepared and adsorbed on inexpensive electrodes composed of (a) reduced graphene oxide (RGO) electrodeposited on fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO) and (b) highly ordered pyrolytic graphite (HOPG). The catalyst-adsorbed electrodes are characterized by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Catalyst loading across the ligand series improved notably with increasing halide substitution [from 2.7 × 10 mol cm for TBA[Co(SCH)] (1) to 6.22 × 10 mol cm for TBA[Co(SCCl)] (3)] and increasing ring size of the benzenedithiolate ligand [up to 3.10 × 10 mol cm for TBA[Co(SCH)] (6)]. Electrocatalytic analysis of the complexes immobilized on HOPG elicits a reductive current response indicative of dihydrogen generation in the presence of mildly acidic aqueous solutions (pH 2-4) of trifluoroacetic acid, with overpotentials of around 0.5 V versus SHE (measured vs platinum). Rate constant (k) estimates resulting from cyclic voltammetry analysis range from 24 to 230 s with the maximum k for TBA[Co(SCHCl)] (2) at an overpotential of 0.59 V versus platinum. Controlled-potential electrolysis studies performed in 0.5 M HSO at -0.5 V versus SHE show impressive initial rate constants of over 500 s under bulk electrolysis conditions; however, steady catalyst deactivation over an 8 h period is observed, with turnover numbers reaching 9.1 × 10. Electrolysis studies reveal that halide substitution is a central factor in improving the turnover stability, whereas the ring size is less of a factor in optimizing the long-term stability of the heterogeneous catalyst manifolds. Catalyst deactivation is likely caused by catalyst desorption from the electrode surfaces.
Heterogeneous dihydrogen production manifolds comprised of bulk graphite, pencil graphite, graphite powder in Nafion films, graphene, and glassy carbon electrodes with adsorbed proton reduction catalyst TBA[Co(S2C6Cl2H2)2] have been prepared and tested for their efficiency to generate dihydrogen in acidic aqueous media. The catalyst adsorbed on these inexpensive graphitic surfaces consistently displays similar electrocatalytic profiles compared to the same catalyst on highly ordered pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) supports, including high activity in moderately acidic aqueous solutions (pH < 4), moderate overpotentials (0.42 V vs platinum), and some of the highest reported initial turnover frequencies under electrolysis conditions (96 s(-1)). The exceptions are glassy carbon and single-layer graphene surfaces, which only weakly adsorb the catalyst, with no sustained catalytic current upon acid addition. In particular, the improved stability and good activity observed for the catalyst adsorbed on graphite powder embedded in a Nafion film shows that this is a promising H2 production system that can be assembled at minimal cost and effort.
Synthetic routes to alkyl and aryl substituted dithiophosphinate salts that contain non-coordinating PPh(4)(+) counter cations are reported. In general, these compounds can be prepared via a multi-step procedure that starts with reacting secondary phosphines, i.e. HPR(2), with two equivalents of elemental S. The synthetic transformation proceeds by oxidation of the phosphine followed by insertion of S into the H-P bond. This approach was used to synthesize a series of dithiophosphinic acids that were fully characterized, namely HS(2)P(p-CF(3)C(6)H(4))(2), HS(2)P(m-CF(3)C(6)H(4))(2), HS(2)P(o-MeC(6)H(4))(2) and HS(2)P(o-MeOC(6)H(4))(2). Although the insertion step was found to be much slower than the oxidation reaction, the formation of (NH(4))S(2)PR(2) from HPSR(2) occurred rapidly upon addition of NH(4)OH. Subsequent cation exchange reactions proceeded readily with PPh(4)Cl in water, under air and at ambient conditions to provide analytically pure samples of [PPh(4)][S(2)PR(2)] (R = p-CF(3)C(6)H(4), m-CF(3)C(6)H(4), o-CF(3)C(6)H(4), o-MeC(6)H(4), o-MeOC(6)H(4), Ph, and Me, 1b-7b, respectively), which were characterized by elemental analysis, multinuclear NMR, and IR spectroscopy. In addition, S(2)PPh(2)(-) and dithiophosphinates with ortho-substituted aryl groups (3b-6b) were characterized by X-ray crystallography. As opposed to the acids, which have short P=S double bonds and long P-SH single bonds, the metric parameters for the S atoms in S(2)PR(2)(-) are equivalent. In addition, the presence of large non-coordinating PPh(4)(+) cations guard against intermolecular P-S···X interactions and ensure that the P-S bond is isolated. These S(2)PR(2)(-) anions, which can be prepared in large quantities and isolated in crystalline form, are attractive for spectroscopic and theoretical studies because the P-S interaction can be probed independently in the absence of intermolecular interactions.
Reduced graphene oxide (RGO) films have been prepared by immersion of graphene oxide (GO) films at room temperature in nonaqueous solutions containing simple, outer-sphere metallocene reductants. Specifically, solutions of cobaltocene, cobaltocene and trifluoroacetic acid (TFA), and decamethylcobaltocene each showed activity for the rapid reduction of GO films cast on a wide variety of substrates. Each reactant increased the conductivity of the films by several orders of magnitude, with RGO films prepared with either decamethylcobaltocene or cobaltocene and TFA possessing the highest conductivities (∼10 S m). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy suggested that while all three reagents lowered the content of carbon-oxygen functionalities, solutions of cobaltocene and TFA were the most effective at reducing the material to sp carbon. Separately, Raman spectra and atomic force micrographs indicated that RGO films prepared with decamethylcobaltocene consisted of the largest graphitic domains and lowest macroscopic roughness. Cumulatively, the data suggest that the outer-sphere reductants can affect the conversion to RGO but the reactivity and mechanism depend on the standard potential of the reductant and the availability of protons. This work both demonstrates a new way to prepare high-quality RGO films on a wide range of substrate materials without annealing and motivates future work to elucidate the chemistry of RGO synthesis through the tunability of outer-sphere reductants such as metallocenes.
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