Mechanistic roles of metal- and ligand-protonated species in hydrogen evolution with [Cp*Rh] complexes

Author:

Henke Wade C.1ORCID,Peng Yun1,Meier Alex A.1,Fujita Etsuko2ORCID,Grills David C.2ORCID,Polyansky Dmitry E.2,Blakemore James D.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045

2. Chemistry Division, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY 11973-5000

Abstract

Protonation reactions involving organometallic complexes are ubiquitous in redox chemistry and often result in the generation of reactive metal hydrides. However, some organometallic species supported by η 5 -pentamethylcyclopentadienyl (Cp*) ligands have recently been shown to undergo ligand-centered protonation by direct proton transfer from acids or tautomerization of metal hydrides, resulting in the generation of complexes bearing the uncommon η 4 -pentamethylcyclopentadiene (Cp*H) ligand. Here, time-resolved pulse radiolysis (PR) and stopped-flow spectroscopic studies have been applied to examine the kinetics and atomistic details involved in the elementary electron- and proton-transfer steps leading to complexes ligated by Cp*H, using Cp*Rh(bpy) as a molecular model (where bpy is 2,2′-bipyridyl). Stopped-flow measurements coupled with infrared and UV-visible detection reveal that the sole product of initial protonation of Cp*Rh(bpy) is [Cp*Rh(H)(bpy)] + , an elusive hydride complex that has been spectroscopically and kinetically characterized here. Tautomerization of the hydride leads to the clean formation of [(Cp*H)Rh(bpy)] + . Variable-temperature and isotopic labeling experiments further confirm this assignment, providing experimental activation parameters and mechanistic insight into metal-mediated hydride-to-proton tautomerism. Spectroscopic monitoring of the second proton transfer event reveals that both the hydride and related Cp*H complex can be involved in further reactivity, showing that [(Cp*H)Rh] is not necessarily an off-cycle intermediate, but, instead, depending on the strength of the acid used to drive catalysis, an active participant in hydrogen evolution. Identification of the mechanistic roles of the protonated intermediates in the catalysis studied here could inform design of optimized catalytic systems supported by noninnocent cyclopentadienyl-type ligands.

Funder

National Science Foundation

DOE | SC | Basic Energy Sciences

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Kansas Academy of Science

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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