Abstract
The mechanism of photochemical CO2 reduction to formate by PCN-136, a Zr-based metal-organic framework (MOF) that incorporates light-harvesting nanographene ligands, has been investigated using steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The catalysis was found to proceed via a “photoreactive capture” mecha-nism, where Zr-based nodes serve to capture CO2 in the form of Zr-bicarbonates, while the nanographene ligands have a dual role to absorb light and to store one-electron equivalents needed for catalysis. We also find that the process occurs via a “two-for-one” route, where a single photon initiates a cascade of electron/hydrogen atom transfers from the sacrificial donor to the CO2-bound MOF. The mechanistic findings obtained here illustrate several advantages of MOF-based architectures in the molecular photocatalyst engineering and provide insights on ways to achieve high formate selectivity.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information for Photoreactive CO2 Capture by a Zr-Nanographene MOF
Description
Synthesis and characterization of MOFs, photochemical and computational details (PDF).
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