Ernest Pastor
Imperial College London
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Featured researches published by Ernest Pastor.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Florian Le Formal; Ernest Pastor; S. David Tilley; Camilo A. Mesa; Stephanie R. Pendlebury; Michael Grätzel; James R. Durrant
Water oxidation is a key chemical reaction, central to both biological photosynthesis and artificial solar fuel synthesis strategies. Despite recent progress on the structure of the natural catalytic site, and on inorganic catalyst function, determining the mechanistic details of this multiredox reaction remains a significant challenge. We report herein a rate law analysis of the order of water oxidation as a function of surface hole density on a hematite photoanode employing photoinduced absorption spectroscopy. Our study reveals a transition from a slow, first order reaction at low accumulated hole density to a faster, third order mechanism once the surface hole density is sufficient to enable the oxidation of nearest neighbor metal atoms. This study thus provides direct evidence for the multihole catalysis of water oxidation by hematite, and demonstrates the hole accumulation level required to achieve this, leading to key insights both for reaction mechanism and strategies to enhance function.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Christopher D. Windle; Ernest Pastor; Anna Reynal; Adrian C. Whitwood; Yana Vaynzof; James R. Durrant; Robin N. Perutz; Erwin Reisner
The photocatalytic activity of phosphonated Re complexes, [Re(2,2′-bipyridine-4,4′-bisphosphonic acid) (CO)3(L)] (ReP; L=3-picoline or bromide) immobilised on TiO2 nanoparticles is reported. The heterogenised Re catalyst on the semiconductor, ReP–TiO2 hybrid, displays an improvement in CO2 reduction photocatalysis. A high turnover number (TON) of 48 molCO molRe−1 is observed in DMF with the electron donor triethanolamine at λ>420 nm. ReP–TiO2 compares favourably to previously reported homogeneous systems and is the highest TON reported to date for a CO2-reducing Re photocatalyst under visible light irradiation. Photocatalytic CO2 reduction is even observed with ReP–TiO2 at wavelengths of λ>495 nm. Infrared and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies confirm that an intact ReP catalyst is present on the TiO2 surface before and during catalysis. Transient absorption spectroscopy suggests that the high activity upon heterogenisation is due to an increase in the lifetime of the immobilised anionic Re intermediate (t50 %>1 s for ReP–TiO2 compared with t50 %=60 ms for ReP in solution) and immobilisation might also reduce the formation of inactive Re dimers. This study demonstrates that the activity of a homogeneous photocatalyst can be improved through immobilisation on a metal oxide surface by favourably modifying its photochemical kinetics.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016
Michael Sachs; Ernest Pastor; Andreas Kafizas; James R. Durrant
In nanostructured thin films, photogenerated charge carriers can access the surface more easily than in dense films and thus react more readily. However, the high surface area of these films has also been associated with enhanced recombination losses via surface states. We herein use transient absorption spectroscopy to compare the ultrafast charge carrier kinetics in dense and nanostructured TiO2 films for its two most widely used polymorphs: anatase and rutile. We find that nanostructuring does not enhance recombination rates on ultrafast time scales, indicating that surface state mediated recombination is not a key loss pathway for either TiO2 polymorph. Rutile shows faster, and less intensity-dependent recombination than anatase, which we assign to its higher doping density. For both polymorphs, we conclude that bulk rather than surface recombination is the primary determinant of charge carrier lifetime.
Chemical Science | 2015
Anna Reynal; Ernest Pastor; Manuela Gross; Shababa Selim; Erwin Reisner; James R. Durrant
Photocatalytic systems for the reduction of aqueous protons are strongly pH-dependent, but the origin of this dependency is still not fully understood. We have studied the effect of different degrees of acidity on the electron transfer dynamics and catalysis taking place in a homogeneous photocatalytic system composed of a phosphonated ruthenium tris(bipyridine) dye (RuP) and a nickel bis(diphosphine) electrocatalyst (NiP) in an aqueous ascorbic acid solution. Our approach is based on transient absorption spectroscopy studies of the efficiency of photo-reduction of RuP and NiP correlated with pH-dependent photocatalytic H2 production and the degree of catalyst protonation. The influence of these factors results in an observed optimum photoactivity at pH 4.5 for the RuP–NiP system. The electron transfer from photo-reduced RuP to NiP is efficient and independent of the pH value of the medium. At pH <4.5, the efficiency of the system is limited by the yield of RuP photo-reduction by the sacrificial electron donor, ascorbic acid. At pH >4.5, the efficiency of the system is limited by the poor protonation of NiP, which inhibits its ability to reduce protons to hydrogen. We have therefore developed a rational strategy utilising transient absorption spectroscopy combined with bulk pH titration, electrocatalytic and photocatalytic experiments to disentangle the complex pH-dependent activity of the homogenous RuP–NiP photocatalytic system, which can be widely applied to other photocatalytic systems.
Nature Communications | 2017
Ernest Pastor; Florian Le Formal; Matthew T. Mayer; S. David Tilley; Laia Francàs; Camilo A. Mesa; Michael Grätzel; James R. Durrant
Multi-electron heterogeneous catalysis is a pivotal element in the (photo)electrochemical generation of solar fuels. However, mechanistic studies of these systems are difficult to elucidate by means of electrochemical methods alone. Here we report a spectroelectrochemical analysis of hydrogen evolution on ruthenium oxide employed as an electrocatalyst and as part of a cuprous oxide-based photocathode. We use optical absorbance spectroscopy to quantify the densities of reduced ruthenium oxide species, and correlate these with current densities resulting from proton reduction. This enables us to compare directly the catalytic function of dark and light electrodes. We find that hydrogen evolution is second order in the density of active, doubly reduced species independent of whether these are generated by applied potential or light irradiation. Our observation of a second order rate law allows us to distinguish between the most common reaction paths and propose a mechanism involving the homolytic reductive elimination of hydrogen.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Camilo A. Mesa; Andreas Kafizas; Laia Francàs; Stephanie R. Pendlebury; Ernest Pastor; Yimeng Ma; Florian Le Formal; Matthew T. Mayer; Michael Grätzel; James R. Durrant
The kinetics of photoelectrochemical (PEC) oxidation of methanol, as a model organic substrate, on α-Fe2O3 photoanodes are studied using photoinduced absorption spectroscopy and transient photocurrent measurements. Methanol is oxidized on α-Fe2O3 to formaldehyde with near unity Faradaic efficiency. A rate law analysis under quasi-steady-state conditions of PEC methanol oxidation indicates that rate of reaction is second order in the density of surface holes on hematite and independent of the applied potential. Analogous data on anatase TiO2 photoanodes indicate similar second-order kinetics for methanol oxidation with a second-order rate constant 2 orders of magnitude higher than that on α-Fe2O3. Kinetic isotope effect studies determine that the rate constant for methanol oxidation on α-Fe2O3 is retarded ∼20-fold by H/D substitution. Employing these data, we propose a mechanism for methanol oxidation under 1 sun irradiation on these metal oxide surfaces and discuss the implications for the efficient PEC methanol oxidation to formaldehyde and concomitant hydrogen evolution.
Archive | 2018
Laia Francàs; Camilo A. Mesa; Ernest Pastor; Florian Le Formal; James R. Durrant
In this chapter, we discuss how rate law analyses can shed light into the kinetics and reaction mechanisms of those processes involved in the production of solar fuels. We show that the key data necessary to elucidate rate laws can be easily obtained by combining photo-induced absorbance (PIA) and transient photocurrent (TPC) measurements. The chapter is structured as follows: in the first part, we give a theoretical background (Section 5.1.1) on the use of rate laws and introduce our methodology and experimental approach (Section 5.1.2). In the second part, we show the potential of this technique through several practical examples on state-of-the art systems which cover: oxygen evolution, on α-Fe2O3 (Section 5.2.1.1) and BiVO4 (Sections 5.2.1.2 and 5.2.1.3) as well as proton reduction on a multi-layer photocathode, Cu2O/AZO/TiO2/RuOx (Section 5.2.2). In addition, the role of the catalyst is also discussed in detail in the last two sections. The kinetic analysis of these systems demonstrates that our methodology is capable of yielding reaction orders and rate constants, both key experimental parameters needed to advance the rational design of photoelectrodes for solar fuels production.
Acta Crystallographica Section A | 2017
Louise Lassalle; Iris D. Young; Mohamed Ibrahim; Ruchira Chatterjee; Sheraz Gul; Franklin Fuller; Aaron S. Brewster; Lacey Douthit; Ernest Pastor; Nicholas K. Sauter; Athina Zouni; Jan Kern; Vittal K. Yachandra; Junko Yano
dioxygen, one of nature’s most fascinating and important reactions. The water-splitting reaction takes place at the oxygen evolving complex (OEC), through five intermediate Sstates (S0 to S4), where S1 is the dark-stable state and S3 is the last semi-stable state before O-O bond formation and O2 evolution. The structure of PSII in the dark state has been solved by X-ray diffraction and X-ray free electron laser (XFEL) providing information of the structural geometry of the Mn4CaO5 cluster in OEC. However, to fully understand the O-O bond formation mechanism, elucidating the structures of the OEC in the different Sstates is essential. In our recently published study, we report high-resolution structures of PSII at room temperature using XFEL coupling with X-ray spectroscopy under different illumination conditions. This enables us to gain new insights about the dynamic changes in the structure of the Mn4CaO5 cluster as well as the ligands and the bound water molecules. We further use ammonia as water analogue to investigate the water-binding site(s) and discriminate between mechanisms proposed in literature. We discuss the precise role of the water bound to OEC in electron transfer and the water-splitting reaction.
Chemical Society Reviews | 2016
Janina Willkomm; Katherine L. Orchard; Anna Reynal; Ernest Pastor; James R. Durrant; Erwin Reisner
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014
Ernest Pastor; Federico M. Pesci; Anna Reynal; Albertus D. Handoko; Mingjia Guo; Xiaoqiang An; Alexander J. Cowan; David R. Klug; James R. Durrant; Junwang Tang