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Cited 12 time in webofscience Cited 18 time in scopus
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Spectroscopic capture of a low-spin Mn(IV)-oxo species in Ni-Mn3O4 nanoparticles during water oxidation catalysis

Authors
Park, SunghakJin, KyoungsukLim, Hyung KyuKim, JinCho, Kang HeeChoi, SeungwooSeo, HongminLee, Moo YoungLee, Yoon HoYoon, SangmoonKim, MiyoungKim, HyungjunKim, Sun HeeNam, Ki Tae
Issue Date
Oct-2020
Publisher
NATURE RESEARCH
Citation
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, v.11, no.1
Journal Title
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume
11
Number
1
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gachon/handle/2020.sw.gachon/83610
DOI
10.1038/s41467-020-19133-w
ISSN
2041-1723
Abstract
High-valent metal-oxo moieties have been implicated as key intermediates preceding various oxidation processes. The critical O-O bond formation step in the Kok cycle that is presumed to generate molecular oxygen occurs through the high-valent Mn-oxo species of the water oxidation complex, i.e., the Mn4Ca cluster in photosystem II. Here, we report the spectroscopic characterization of new intermediates during the water oxidation reaction of manganese-based heterogeneous catalysts and assign them as low-spin Mn(IV)-oxo species. Recently, the effects of the spin state in transition metal catalysts on catalytic reactivity have been intensely studied; however, no detailed characterization of a low-spin Mn(IV)-oxo intermediate species currently exists. We demonstrate that a low-spin configuration of Mn(IV), S=1/2, is stably present in a heterogeneous electrocatalyst of Ni-doped monodisperse 10-nm Mn3O4 nanoparticles via oxo-ligand field engineering. An unprecedented signal (g=1.83) is found to evolve in the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum during the stepwise transition from the Jahn-Teller-distorted Mn(III). In-situ Raman analysis directly provides the evidence for Mn(IV)-oxo species as the active intermediate species. Computational analysis confirmed that the substituted nickel species induces the formation of a z-axis-compressed octahedral C-4v crystal field that stabilizes the low-spin Mn(IV)-oxo intermediates. Understanding reaction intermediates provides a foundation for active electrocatalysts' design, but it remains elusive for heterogeneous electrocatalysts. Here, the authors report the spectroscopic characterization of low-spin Mn(IV)-oxo as the active intermediates during electrochemical water oxidation.
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