| Literature DB >> 31497650 |
Dogukan H Apaydin1, Engelbert Portenkirchner2, Pichayada Jintanalert3, Matthias Strauss1, Jirapong Luangchaiyaporn3, Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci1, Patchanita Thamyongkit4.
Abstract
We report the synthesis and electrochemical properties of freebase tetraphenyltetrabenzoporphyrin and its complexes of Zn(ii), Co(ii), Ni(ii), Cu(ii) and Sn(iv) towards electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2). Based on cyclic voltammetry, it is shown that central metals significantly affect the electrocatalytic performance in the reduction of CO2 in terms of reduction potential and catalytic current enhancement. At an applied potential of -1.90 V vs. an Ag/AgCl quasi reference electrode for 20 h, the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 realized by Zn(ii)- and Cu(ii)-tetraphenyltetrabenzoporphyrins to carbon monoxide resulted in faradaic efficiencies of around 48% and 33%, respectively.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 31497650 PMCID: PMC6695572 DOI: 10.1039/c8se00422f
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Energy Fuels ISSN: 2398-4902 Impact factor: 6.367
Chart 1Chemical structure of the benzoporphyrins.
Scheme 1Synthesis of Zn-TPBP, Co-TPBP and Sn-TPBP.
Fig. 1Normalized absorption spectra of (a) TPBP (black solid line), Zn-TPBP (red dashed line) and Co-TPBP (blue dotted line), and (b) Ni-TPBP (black solid line), and Cu-TPBP (red dashed line).
Absorption and emission spectral data of the benzoporphyrins
| Compound |
|
|
|
| 465 (5.3), 588 | 720, 787 |
|
| 461 (2.8), 607 | 658, 724 |
|
| 446 (1.7), 595 | — |
|
| 449 (2.2), 592 | — |
|
| 449 (1.6), 463 (1.9), 601 (0.1), 648 (0.8) | — |
|
| 430 (0.3), 466 (4.1), 612 | 665, 745 |
Due to low absorption, the ε value could not be determined.
No emission peak was observed.
Fig. 2Normalized emission spectra of TPBP (black solid line), Zn-TPBP (red dashed line) and Sn-TPBP (blue dotted line).
Fig. 3Cyclic voltammograms of a 0.1 M TBAPF6 solution in DMF containing 1.0 mM (a) TPBP, (b) Zn-TPBP, (c) Co-TPBP, (d) Ni-TPBP, (e) Cu-TPBP and (f) Sn-TPBP under the N2-(black solid line) and CO2-saturated (red dashed line) conditions recorded at a scan rate of 50 mV s–1 in the potential range of 0.00 to –2.00 V.