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Projects: Projects for Investigator
Reference Number EP/R03382X/1
Title Photocatalysis in coordination cages using supramolecular arrays of chromophores
Status Completed
Energy Categories Renewable Energy Sources(Solar Energy) 10%;
Not Energy Related 75%;
Hydrogen and Fuel Cells(Hydrogen, Hydrogen production) 10%;
Renewable Energy Sources(Bio-Energy, Production of transport biofuels (incl. Production from wastes)) 5%;
Research Types Basic and strategic applied research 100%
Science and Technology Fields PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Chemistry) 100%
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation Not Cross-cutting 100%
Principal Investigator Professor M D Ward
No email address given
Chemistry
University of Sheffield
Award Type Standard
Funding Source EPSRC
Start Date 01 July 2018
End Date 30 June 2021
Duration 36 months
Total Grant Value £473,930
Industrial Sectors No relevance to Underpinning Sectors
Region Yorkshire & Humberside
Programme NC : Physical Sciences
 
Investigators Principal Investigator Professor M D Ward , Chemistry, University of Sheffield (99.999%)
  Other Investigator Professor V Stavros , Chemistry, University of Warwick (0.001%)
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract The use of light to cause chemical reactions is well established and, from a renewable energy perspective, of fundamental importance. A recently-developed way in which this can be made to happen is via 'photo-redox catalysis'. A metal complex catalyst, or an organic catalyst, absorbs light to enter an high-energy excited state which persists for hundreds / thousands of nanoseconds; this can then donate an electron to (or accept an electron from) a substrate, generating a radical anion (or cation) which then undergoes the desired reaction. In the last 10 years this use of the photophysical properties of simple light-absorbing species with appropriate excited states has become a well-established tool in synthetic chemistry.In this project we wish to take this principle to a much higher level by using coordination cages - hollow, pseudo-spherical metal/ligand assemblies with large central cavities that can accommodate small molecule 'guests' - as multi-component catalysts. The cages contain large numbers of metal and ligand components built into their superstructure in a regular array surrounding the central cavity. They can be prepared in such a way that they contain large numbers of metal complex catalysts or organic catalyst units in the superstructure. In the largest cages of the type that we will prepare, 24 individual aromatic luminescent units can be incorporated into a single cage-like assembly surrounding a central cavity which a 'guest' molecule will bind. Having 24 potential photo-redox catalysts surrounding a single reactive species could would be almost impossible to achieve in any other way.The aim is to see if, when a potential substrate (reactant) is bound inside the central cavity of one of the cages, it undergoes a photo-redox catalytic transformation far more effectively than when it is free in solution where it has to collide randomly with the catalyst in the short space of time that the catalyst excited state exists. Binding the substrate in the cage cavity removes the requirement for chance collisions of separate species in solution by holding the guest very close to a high local concentration of catalyst units, such that electron transfer will be very fast and hence the catalysis should be much faster and more efficient. In addition, because the cage cavities show size- and shape-selectivity for the guests that they bind, the cage-based catalysts should show much higher selectivity for specific substrates allowing one substrate from a mixture to be selected, bound, transformed and ejected form the cavity whilst others are unaffected. Success here will result in a new generation of photo-redox catalysts, based on supramolecular host/guest principles, that are far more effective than the current ones.In addition, the exciting possibility exists that - given a single molecule of a substrate surrounded by a large number of potential electron-donors - two electrons could be transferred essentiallysimultaneously to a single guest to give a doubly-reduced product. This is extremely difficult to achieve normally because of the unlikelihood of one substrate molecule colliding with two one-electron catalyst molecules while they are both in their short-lived excited state; an analogy would be like trying to hit a flying clay target with two rifle bullets simultaneously. However the very high local concentration of large numbers of chromophores around each bound guest makes this much more statistically likely, such that two-electron photocatalysis may become a reality in a wide range of cage/guest systems. This is of fundamental importance for solar energy harvesting as many of the important reactions involved in either water splitting to generate H2 fuel, or fixation of CO2 to generate methanol as a fuel, require simultaneous transfer of two electrons: use of coordination cages as multi-electron photo-redox catalysts could make this a reality.
Publications (none)
Final Report (none)
Added to Database 05/02/19