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Dive into the research topics where Marcella Bonchio is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcella Bonchio.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Polyoxometalate Embedding of a Tetraruthenium(IV)-oxo-core by Template-Directed Metalation of (γ-SiW10O36) 8- : A Totally Inorganic Oxygen-Evolving Catalyst

Andrea Sartorel; Mauro Carraro; Gianfranco Scorrano; Rita De Zorzi; Silvano Geremia; Neal D. McDaniel; Stefan Bernhard; Marcella Bonchio

Solid state and solution evidence confirms the embedding of an adamantane-like, Ru4O6 fragment by the divacant, gamma-decatungstosilicate ligand. The resulting complex catalyzes water oxidation to oxygen with TON up to 500 and TOF > 450 h-1.


Nature Chemistry | 2010

Efficient water oxidation at carbon nanotube–polyoxometalate electrocatalytic interfaces

Francesca M. Toma; Andrea Sartorel; Matteo Iurlo; Mauro Carraro; Pietro Parisse; Chiara Maccato; Stefania Rapino; Benito Rodriguez Gonzalez; Heinz Amenitsch; Tatiana Da Ros; Loredana Casalis; A. Goldoni; Massimo Marcaccio; Gianfranco Scorrano; G. Scoles; Francesco Paolucci; Maurizio Prato; Marcella Bonchio

Water is the renewable, bulk chemical that nature uses to enable carbohydrate production from carbon dioxide. The dream goal of energy research is to transpose this incredibly efficient process and make an artificial device whereby the catalytic splitting of water is finalized to give a continuous production of oxygen and hydrogen. Success in this task would guarantee the generation of hydrogen as a carbon-free fuel to satisfy our energy demands at no environmental cost. Here we show that very efficient and stable nanostructured, oxygen-evolving anodes are obtained by the assembly of an oxygen-evolving polyoxometalate cluster (a totally inorganic ruthenium catalyst) with a conducting bed of multiwalled carbon nanotubes. Our bioinspired electrode addresses the one major challenge of artificial photosynthesis, namely efficient water oxidation, which brings us closer to being able to power the planet with carbon-free fuels.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Water Oxidation at a Tetraruthenate Core Stabilized by Polyoxometalate Ligands: Experimental and Computational Evidence To Trace the Competent Intermediates

Andrea Sartorel; Pere Miró; Enrico Salvadori; Sophie Romain; Mauro Carraro; Gianfranco Scorrano; Marilena Di Valentin; Antoni Llobet; Carles Bo; Marcella Bonchio

Converging UV-vis, EPR, rRaman, and DFT calculations highlight the evolution of [Ru(4)(H(2)O)(4)(mu-O)(4)(mu-OH)(2)(gamma-SiW(10)O(36))(2)](10-), 1, to high-valent intermediates. In analogy with the natural enzyme, five different oxidation states, generated from 1, have been found to power the catalytic cycle for water oxidation. A high electrophilic tetraruthenium(V)-hydroxo species is envisaged as the competent intermediate, undergoing nucleophilic attack by an external water molecule as a key step in the formation of a new O-O bond under catalytic conditions.


Chemical Communications | 2010

Ruthenium polyoxometalate water splitting catalyst: very fast hole scavenging from photogenerated oxidants

Michele Orlandi; Roberto Argazzi; Andrea Sartorel; Mauro Carraro; Gianfranco Scorrano; Marcella Bonchio; Franco Scandola

The tetraruthenium polyoxometalate water oxidation catalyst 1 performs very fast hole scavenging from photogenerated Ru(iii) polypyridine complexes, both in homogeneous solution and at a sensitized nanocrystalline TiO(2) surface.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Photocatalytic water oxidation: tuning light-induced electron transfer by molecular Co4O4 cores.

Serena Berardi; Giuseppina La Ganga; Mirco Natali; Irene Bazzan; Fausto Puntoriero; Andrea Sartorel; Franco Scandola; Sebastiano Campagna; Marcella Bonchio

Isostructural cubane-shaped catalysts [Co(III)(4)(μ-O)(4)(μ-CH(3)COO)(4)(p-NC(5)H(4)X)(4)], 1-X (X = H, Me, t-Bu, OMe, Br, COOMe, CN), enable water oxidation under dark and illuminated conditions, where the primary step of photoinduced electron transfer obeys to Hammett linear free energy relationship behavior. Ligand design and catalyst optimization are instrumental for sustained O(2) productivity with quantum efficiency up to 80% at λ > 400 nm, thus opening a new perspective for in vitro molecular photosynthesis.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Photocatalytic Water Oxidation by a Mixed‐Valent MnIII3MnIVO3 Manganese Oxo Core that Mimics the Natural Oxygen‐Evolving Center

Rami Al‐Oweini; Andrea Sartorel; Bassem S. Bassil; Mirco Natali; Serena Berardi; Franco Scandola; Ulrich Kortz; Marcella Bonchio

The functional core of oxygenic photosynthesis is in charge of catalytic water oxidation by a multi-redox Mn(III)/Mn(IV) manifold that evolves through five electronic states (S(i), where i=0-4). The synthetic model system of this catalytic cycle and of its S0→S4 intermediates is the expected turning point for artificial photosynthesis. The tetramanganese-substituted tungstosilicate [Mn(III)3Mn(IV)O3(CH3COO)3(A-α-SiW9O34)](6-)(Mn4POM) offers an unprecedented mimicry of the natural system in its reduced S0 state; it features a hybrid organic-inorganic coordination sphere and is anchored on a polyoxotungstate. Evidence for its photosynthetic properties when combined with [Ru(bpy)3](2+) and S2O8(2-) is obtained by nanosecond laser flash photolysis; its S0→S1 transition within milliseconds and multiple-hole-accumulating properties were studied. Photocatalytic oxygen evolution is achieved in a buffered medium (pH 5) with a quantum efficiency of 1.7%.


Chemical Communications | 2012

Is [Co4(H2O)2(α-PW9O34)2]10− a genuine molecular catalyst in photochemical water oxidation? Answers from time-resolved hole scavenging experiments

Mirco Natali; Serena Berardi; Andrea Sartorel; Marcella Bonchio; Sebastiano Campagna; Franco Scandola

Water oxidation catalysts: evolution of [Co(4)(H(2)O)(2)(α-PW(9)O(34))(2)](10-) to catalytically active species is assessed by laser flash photolysis in sacrificial photocatalytic cycles with Ru(bpy)(3)(2+) as a photosensitizer.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Photoinduced Water Oxidation by a Tetraruthenium Polyoxometalate Catalyst: Ion-pairing and Primary Processes with Ru(bpy)32+ Photosensitizer

Mirco Natali; Michele Orlandi; Serena Berardi; Sebastiano Campagna; Marcella Bonchio; Andrea Sartorel; Franco Scandola

The tetraruthenium polyoxometalate [Ru(4)(μ-O)(4)(μ-OH)(2)(H(2)O)(4)(γ-SiW(10)O(36))(2)](10-) (1) behaves as a very efficient water oxidation catalyst in photocatalytic cycles using Ru(bpy)(3)(2+) as sensitizer and persulfate as sacrificial oxidant. Two interrelated issues relevant to this behavior have been examined in detail: (i) the effects of ion pairing between the polyanionic catalyst and the cationic Ru(bpy)(3)(2+) sensitizer, and (ii) the kinetics of hole transfer from the oxidized sensitizer to the catalyst. Complementary charge interactions in aqueous solution leads to an efficient static quenching of the Ru(bpy)(3)(2+) excited state. The quenching takes place in ion-paired species with an average 1:Ru(bpy)(3)(2+) stoichiometry of 1:4. It occurs by very fast (ca. 2 ps) electron transfer from the excited photosensitizer to the catalyst followed by fast (15-150 ps) charge recombination (reversible oxidative quenching mechanism). This process competes appreciably with the primary photoreaction of the excited sensitizer with the sacrificial oxidant, even in high ionic strength media. The Ru(bpy)(3)(3+) generated by photoreaction of the excited sensitizer with the sacrificial oxidant undergoes primary bimolecular hole scavenging by 1 at a remarkably high rate (3.6 ± 0.1 × 10(9) M(-1) s(-1)), emphasizing the kinetic advantages of this molecular species over, e.g., colloidal oxide particles as water oxidation catalysts. The kinetics of the subsequent steps and final oxygen evolution process involved in the full photocatalytic cycle are not known in detail. An indirect indication that all these processes are relatively fast, however, is provided by the flash photolysis experiments, where a single molecule of 1 is shown to undergo, in 40 ms, ca. 45 turnovers in Ru(bpy)(3)(3+) reduction. With the assumption that one molecule of oxygen released after four hole-scavenging events, this translates into a very high average turnover frequency (280 s(-1)) for oxygen production.


ACS Nano | 2013

Knitting the Catalytic Pattern of Artificial Photosynthesis to a Hybrid Graphene Nanotexture

Mildred Quintana; Alejandro Montellano López; Stefania Rapino; Francesca M. Toma; Matteo Iurlo; Mauro Carraro; Andrea Sartorel; Chiara Maccato; Xiaoxing Ke; Carla Bittencourt; Tatiana Da Ros; Gustaaf Van Tendeloo; Massimo Marcaccio; Francesco Paolucci; Maurizio Prato; Marcella Bonchio

The artificial leaf project calls for new materials enabling multielectron catalysis with minimal overpotential, high turnover frequency, and long-term stability. Is graphene a better material than carbon nanotubes to enhance water oxidation catalysis for energy applications? Here we show that functionalized graphene with a tailored distribution of polycationic, quaternized, ammonium pendants provides an sp(2) carbon nanoplatform to anchor a totally inorganic tetraruthenate catalyst, mimicking the oxygen evolving center of natural PSII. The resulting hybrid material displays oxygen evolution at overpotential as low as 300 mV at neutral pH with negligible loss of performance after 4 h testing. This multilayer electroactive asset enhances the turnover frequency by 1 order of magnitude with respect to the isolated catalyst, and provides a definite up-grade of the carbon nanotube material, with a similar surface functionalization. Our innovation is based on a noninvasive, synthetic protocol for graphene functionalization that goes beyond the ill-defined oxidation-reduction methods, allowing a definite control of the surface properties.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2012

Shaping the beating heart of artificial photosynthesis: oxygenic metal oxide nano-clusters

Andrea Sartorel; Mauro Carraro; Francesca M. Toma; Maurizio Prato; Marcella Bonchio

Water oxidation is the crucial stage in the chemical and molecular sequence of photosynthesis, designed by Nature to convert solar light into chemical energy. The artificial “off-leaf” transposition is a major goal of energy research, aiming at the continuous production of hydrogen as a solar fuel, through the photo-catalytic splitting of water. Success in this task primarily depends on the interplay of light-activated multi-electron oxidation and reduction cycles and on the invention of stable and robust water oxidation catalysts, liberating oxygen with fast rates, high quantum yield, and long-term activity. A promising perspective is herein envisaged in the molecular design of functional metal-oxide cores and composite nano-materials.

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Ulrich Kortz

Jacobs University Bremen

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