Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.44, No.19, 6744-6754, 2005
Electrochemistry, spectroelectrochemistry, chloride binding, and O-2 catalytic reactions of free-base porphyrin-cobalt corrole dyads
Three face-to-face linked porphyrin-corrole dyads were investigated as to their electrochemistry, spectroelectro-chemistry, and chloride-binding properties in dichloromethane or benzonitrile. The same three compounds were also investigated as to their ability to catalyze the electroreduction of dioxygen in aqueous 1 M HCIO4 or HCI when adsorbed on a graphite electrode. The characterized compounds are represented as (PCY)H2Co, where P = a porphyrin dianion; C = a corrole trianion; and Y = a biphenylenyl, 9,9-dimethylxanthenyl, or anthracenyl spacer, which links the two macrocycles in a face-to-face arrangement. An axial binding of one or two Cl- ligands to the cobalt center of the corrole is observed for singly and doubly oxidized (PCY)H2CO, with the exact stoichiometry of the reaction depending upon the spacer size and the concentration of Cl- added to solution. No Cl- binding occurs for the neutral or reduced forms of the dyad, which contrasts with what is seen for the monocorrole, (Me-4-Ph5Co,)Co, where a single Cl- ligand is added to the Co(III) corrole in PhCN. The Co(III) form of the corrole in (PCY)H2Co also appears to be the catalytically active species in the electroreduction of dioxygen, which occurs at potentials associated with the Co(IV)/Co(III) reaction, that is, 0.35 V in 1 M HCIO4 as compared to 0.31-0.42 V for the same three dyads in PhCN and 0.1 M TBAP. The potential for the catalytic electroreduction of O-2 in HCI shifts negatively by 60 to 70 mV as compared to E-1/2 values in 1 M HCIO4, consistent with the binding of Cl- to the Co(IV) form of the corrole and its rapid dissociation after electroreduction to Co(III) at the electrode surface.