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Special CCE Seminar

Monday, September 8, 2014
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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Noyes 153 (J. Holmes Sturdivant Lecture Hall)
Synthetic Cluster Models of Biological and Heterogeneous Oxygen Evolving Catalysts
Theodor Agapie, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology,

Redox-inactive metals are found in biological and heterogeneous water oxidation catalysts, but their roles are currently not well understood. Additionally, heterogeneous mixed transition metal oxides are emerging as good catalysts for oxygen reduction and evolution. With current schemes of energy conversion involving water oxidation and dioxygen reduction, a detailed understanding of these systems is imperative for the rational development of practical catalysts. Targeting synthetic model clusters of these catalysts, multinucleating ligands were developed for Earth abundant first-row transition metals (Mn2+, Fe2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Cu2+, Zn2+). Trimetallic complexes were utilized as precursors to more elaborate metal oxide clusters. Tetranuclear complexes displaying Mn4, Mn3Ca and other Mn3M motifs with varied number of bridging oxo ligands were synthesized. The reduction potentials of these clusters span a window of over 1 V. With the pKa of the redox-inactive metal-aqua complex as a measure of Lewis acidity, structurally analogous series of clusters display linear dependence between reduction potential and acidity. These findings provide a general strategy for tuning the clusters over a wide range of potentials and reactivity modes. Implications for the function of oxygen evolving and reduction catalysts will be discussed.

For more information, please contact Julianne Just by phone at 626-395-2924 or by email at [email protected].