TY - THES A1 - Schindler, Dorothee T1 - Water Oxidation with Multinuclear Ruthenium Catalysts T1 - Wasseroxidation mit mehrkernigen Ruthenium-Katalysatoren N2 - In terms of the need of environmentally benign renewable and storable energy sources, splitting of water into hydrogen and oxygen by using sunlight is a promising approach. Hereby, water oxidation catalysts (WOCs) are required to perform the water oxidation comprising the transfer of four electrons to provide the reducing equivalents for producing hydrogen. The class of Ru(bda) (bda = 2,2'-bipyridine-6,6'-dicarboxylate) catalysts has proven to be efficient for this reaction. In this thesis, ligand exchange processes in Ru(bda) complexes have been analyzed and the formation of multinuclear macrocyclic WOCs was studied. Based on the knowledge acquired by these studies, new multinuclear cyclic Ru(bda) complexes have been synthesized and their catalytic efficiencies in homogeneous water oxidation have been investigated. Going one step further for setting up functional devices, molecular WOCs have been immobilized on conducting or semiconducting supporting materials. Direct anchoring on carbon nanotubes generated a promising materials for further applications. N2 - Der Klimawandel als die gesellschaftliche Herausforderung des 21. Jahrhunderts ist der Allgemeinheit in den letzten Jahren insbesondere durch Aktivitäten der jüngeren Generation mehr und mehr ins Bewusstsein gerückt. Mit ihrem Engagement in Klimabewegungen machen sie auf die Dringlichkeit aufmerksam, fossile Brennstoffe als Hauptverursacher schädlicher Emissionen zu ersetzen. Angesichts des Bedarfs an umweltfreundlichen erneuerbaren und zugleich speicherbaren Energie¬quellen ist die Erzeugung von Wasserstoff unter Verwendung von Sonnenlicht zur Spaltung von Wasser in seine Bestandteile ein vielversprechender Ansatz (Kapitel 2.1). Die Wasser¬oxidationsreaktion, die die erforderlichen Reduktionsäquivalenten für die Umwandlung von Protonen in molekularen Wasserstoff liefert, umfasst jedoch einen herausfordernden Vier-Elektronen-Transferprozess, der robuste und effiziente Katalysatoren unverzichtbar macht (Kapitel 2.2). In den letzten Jahrzehnten durchgeführte ausführliche Untersuchungen an molekularen Wasser¬oxidations¬katalysatoren (WOCs, engl: water oxidation catalysts) haben gezeigt, dass Katalysatoren, die das katalytisch aktive Ru(bda) Fragment (bda: 2,2'-bipyridin-6,6'-dicarbonsäure) enthalten, eine hohe Effizienz in der Wasseroxidation aufweisen.[41] Basierend auf diesen Erkenntnissen entwickelten Würthner und Mitarbeiter einen supra-molekularen Ansatz, bei dem drei Ru(bda) Einheiten makrozyklisch organisiert werden.[42] Diese makrozyklischen Ru(bda) Komplexe zeigten außerordentlich hohe katalytische Aktivitäten mit bedeutend höherer Umsatzfrequenz (TOF, engl: turnover frequency) und Umsatzzahl (TON, engl: turnover number) sowie einer verbesserten Stabilität des Katalysators im Vergleich zur einkernigen Referenzverbindung Ru(bda)(pic)2.[40] Interessanter¬weise wurde heraus¬gefunden, dass vermutlich ein wasserstoffverbrücktes Wasser¬netzwerk in der Kavität des Makrozyklus für schnelle Protonen-gekoppelte Elektronen-Transfer-Schritte (PCET, engl: protonen-coupled electron transfer) und somit beschleunigte Reaktionsgeschwindigkeiten verantwortlich ist. Darüber hinaus belegten mechanistische Untersuchungen einen Wechsel des katalytischen Weges von einem bimolekularen I2M (Interaktion von zwei M-O Einheiten, engl: interaction of two M-O units) Mechanismus im einkernigen Ru(bda)pic2 Referenzkomplex zu einem mononuklearen WNA (nukleophiler Wasserangriff, engl: water nucleophiilic attack) Mechanismus im dreikernigen makro-zyklischen WOC MC3 (Kapitel 2.3), was letzteren besonders interessant für anwendungs-bezogene Untersuchungen macht. ... KW - Rutheniumkomplexe KW - catalysis KW - Wasser KW - Katalyse KW - Oxidation KW - metallosupramolecular chemistry KW - ruthenium complexes KW - water oxidation KW - Ruthenium Komplexe KW - Metallosupramolekulare Chemie KW - Wasseroxidation Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-233093 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Noll, Niklas A1 - Krause, Ana-Maria A1 - Beuerle, Florian A1 - Würthner, Frank T1 - Enzyme-like water preorganization in a synthetic molecular cleft for homogeneous water oxidation catalysis JF - Nature Catalysis N2 - Inspired by the proficiency of natural enzymes, mimicking of nanoenvironments for precise substrate preorganisation is a promising strategy in catalyst design. However, artificial examples of enzyme-like activation of H\(_2\)O molecules for the challenging oxidative water splitting reaction are hardly explored. Here, we introduce a mononuclear Ru(bda) complex (M1, bda: 2,2’-bipyridine-6,6’-dicarboxylate) equipped with a bipyridine-functionalized ligand to preorganize H\(_2\)O molecules in front of the metal center as in enzymatic clefts. The confined pocket of M1 accelerates chemically driven water oxidation at pH 1 by facilitating a water nucleophilic attack pathway with a remarkable turnover frequency of 140 s\(^{−1}\) that is comparable to the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II. Single crystal X-ray analysis of M1 under catalytic conditions allowed the observation of a 7th H\(_2\)O ligand directly coordinated to a RuIII center. Via a well-defined hydrogen-bonding network, another H\(_2\)O substrate is preorganized for the crucial O–O bond formation via nucleophilic attack. KW - water oxidation KW - enzyme KW - catalysis KW - molecular KW - catalyst synthesis KW - catalytic mechanisms KW - homogeneous catalysis KW - photocatalysis KW - supramolecular chemistry Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-302897 N1 - This version of the article has been accepted for publication, after peer review and is subject to Springer Nature’s AM terms of use (https://www.springernature.com/gp/open-research/policies/accepted-manuscript-terms), but is not the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections. The Version of Record is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41929-022-00843-x ET - accepted version ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Karak, Suvendu A1 - Stepanenko, Vladimir A1 - Addicoat, Matthew A. A1 - Keßler, Philipp A1 - Moser, Simon A1 - Beuerle, Florian A1 - Würthner, Frank T1 - A Covalent Organic Framework for Cooperative Water Oxidation JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society N2 - The future of water-derived hydrogen as the “sustainable energy source” straightaway bets on the success of the sluggish oxygen-generating half-reaction. The endeavor to emulate the natural photosystem II for efficient water oxidation has been extended across the spectrum of organic and inorganic combinations. However, the achievement has so far been restricted to homogeneous catalysts rather than their pristine heterogeneous forms. The poor structural understanding and control over the mechanistic pathway often impede the overall development. Herein, we have synthesized a highly crystalline covalent organic framework (COF) for chemical and photochemical water oxidation. The interpenetrated structure assures the catalyst stability, as the catalyst’s performance remains unaltered after several cycles. This COF exhibits the highest ever accomplished catalytic activity for such an organometallic crystalline solid-state material where the rate of oxygen evolution is as high as ∼26,000 μmol L\(^{–1}\) s\(^{–1}\) (second-order rate constant k ≈ 1650 μmol L s\(^{–1}\) g\(^{–2}\)). The catalyst also proves its exceptional activity (k ≈ 1600 μmol L s\(^{–1}\) g\(^{–2}\)) during light-driven water oxidation under very dilute conditions. The cooperative interaction between metal centers in the crystalline network offers 20–30-fold superior activity during chemical as well as photocatalytic water oxidation as compared to its amorphous polymeric counterpart. KW - water oxidation KW - sustainable energy source KW - covalent organic framework KW - catalyst KW - crystalline KW - catalysis KW - nanoparticles Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-287591 UR - https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.2c07282 SN - 0002-7863 VL - 144 IS - 38 ER -