ChemElectroChem (Oct 2023)

Controlled Potential Electrolysis: Transition from Fast to Slow Regimes in Homogeneous Molecular Catalysis. Application to the Electroreduction of CO2 Catalyzed by Iron Porphyrin

  • Rana Deeba,
  • Alexandra Collard,
  • Camille Rollin,
  • Florian Molton,
  • Dr. Sylvie Chardon‐Noblat,
  • Prof. Dr. Cyrille Costentin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/celc.202300350
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 20
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Molecular catalysis of electrochemical reactions is a field of intense activity because of the current interest in electrifying chemical transformations, including both electrosynthesis of organic molecules and production of fuels via small molecule activation. Controlled potential electrolysis (CPE) is often coupled with in situ in operando spectroscopic methods with the aim to gather mechanistic information regarding the catalytic species involved. Herein, considering a simple mechanism for a homogeneous molecular catalysis of an electrochemical reaction, we establish the concentration profile of the catalyst in the electrolysis cell enabling to envision the information that can be obtained from the coupling of this CPE with a spectroscopic probe in the cell compartment. We show how the characteristic parameters of the system (catalytic rate constant, cell dimensions and stirring rate) affect the response with particular emphasis on the transition between two limiting cases, namely a ‘fast’ catalysis regime where catalysis only takes place in a small layer adjacent to the electrode surface and a ‘slow’ catalysis regime where catalysis takes place in the bulk of the solution. These formal concepts are then illustrated with an experimental example, the electroreduction of CO2 in dimethylformamide homogeneously catalyzed by iron tetraphenylporphyrin and followed by UV‐vis spectroscopy.

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