posted on 2017-06-09, 00:00authored byAmell Alsudairi, Jingkun Li, Nagappan Ramaswamy, Sanjeev Mukerjee, K. M. Abraham, Qingying Jia
Metal macrocycles
are among the most important catalytic systems
in electrocatalysis and biocatalysis owing to their rich redox chemistry.
Precise understanding of the redox behavior of metal macrocycles in
operando is essential for fundamental studies and practical applications
of this catalytic system. Here we present electrochemical data for
the representative iron phthalocyanine (FePc) in both aqueous and
nonaqueous media coupled with in situ Raman and X-ray absorption analyses
to challenge the traditional notion of the redox transition of FePc
at the low potential end in aqueous media by showing that it arises
from the redox transition of the ring. Our data unequivocally demonstrate
that the electron is shuttled to the Pc ring via the Fe(II)/Fe(I)
redox center. The Fe(II)/Fe(I) redox transition of FePc in aqueous
media is indiscernible by normal spectroscopic methods owing to the
lack of a suitable axial ligand to stabilize the Fe(I) state.