Nicolas Kaeffer
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Accounts of Chemical Research | 2015
Nicolas Kaeffer; Murielle Chavarot-Kerlidou; Vincent Artero
Mimicking photosynthesis and producing solar fuels is an appealing way to store the huge amount of renewable energy from the sun in a durable and sustainable way. Hydrogen production through water splitting has been set as a first-ranking target for artificial photosynthesis. Pursuing that goal requires the development of efficient and stable catalytic systems, only based on earth abundant elements, for the reduction of protons from water to molecular hydrogen. Cobalt complexes based on glyoxime ligands, called cobaloximes, emerged 10 years ago as a first generation of such catalysts. They are now widely utilized for the construction of photocatalytic systems for hydrogen evolution. In this Account, we describe our contribution to the development of a second generation of catalysts, cobalt diimine-dioxime complexes. While displaying similar catalytic activities as cobaloximes, these catalysts prove more stable against hydrolysis under strongly acidic conditions thanks to the tetradentate nature of the diimine-dioxime ligand. Importantly, H2 evolution proceeds via proton-coupled electron transfer steps involving the oxime bridge as a protonation site, reproducing the mechanism at play in the active sites of hydrogenase enzymes. This feature allows H2 to be evolved at modest overpotentials, that is, close to the thermodynamic equilibrium over a wide range of acid-base conditions in nonaqueous solutions. Derivatization of the diimine-dioxime ligand at the hydrocarbon chain linking the two imine functions enables the covalent grafting of the complex onto electrode surfaces in a more convenient manner than for the parent bis-bidentate cobaloximes. Accordingly, we attached diimine-dioxime cobalt catalysts onto carbon nanotubes and demonstrated the catalytic activity of the resulting molecular-based electrode for hydrogen evolution from aqueous acetate buffer. The stability of immobilized catalysts was found to be orders of magnitude higher than that of catalysts in the bulk. It led us to evidence that these cobalt complexes, as cobaloximes and other cobalt salts do, decompose under turnover conditions where they are free in solution. Of note, this process generates in aqueous phosphate buffer a nanoparticulate film consisting of metallic cobalt coated with a cobalt-oxo/hydroxo-phosphate layer in contact with the electrolyte. This novel material, H2-CoCat, mediates H2 evolution from neutral aqueous buffer at low overpotentials. Finally, the potential of diimine-dioxime cobalt complexes for light-driven H2 generation has been attested both in water/acetonitrile mixtures and in fully aqueous solutions. All together, these studies hold promise for the construction of molecular-based photoelectrodes for H2 evolution and further integration in dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cells (DS-PECs) able to achieve overall water splitting.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Go Sahara; Hiromu Kumagai; Kazuhiko Maeda; Nicolas Kaeffer; Vincent Artero; Masanobu Higashi; Ryu Abe; Osamu Ishitani
Photoelectrochemical CO2 reduction activity of a hybrid photocathode, based on a Ru(II)-Re(I) supramolecular metal complex photocatalyst immobilized on a NiO electrode (NiO-RuRe), was confirmed in an aqueous electrolyte solution. Under half-reaction conditions, the NiO-RuRe photocathode generated CO with high selectivity, and its turnover number for CO formation reached 32 based on the amount of immobilized RuRe. A photoelectrochemical cell comprising a NiO-RuRe photocathode and a CoOx/TaON photoanode showed activity for visible-light-driven CO2 reduction using water as a reductant to generate CO and O2, with the assistance of an external electrical (0.3 V) and chemical (0.10 V) bias produced by a pH difference. This is the first example of a molecular and semiconductor photocatalyst hybrid-constructed photoelectrochemical cell for visible-light-driven CO2 reduction using water as a reductant.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Nicolas Kaeffer; Julien Massin; Colette Lebrun; Olivier Renault; Murielle Chavarot-Kerlidou; Vincent Artero
Dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cells (DS-PECs) for water splitting hold promise for the large-scale storage of solar energy in the form of (solar) fuels, owing to the low cost and ease to process of their constitutive photoelectrode materials. The efficiency of such systems ultimately depends on our capacity to promote unidirectional light-driven electron transfer from the electrode substrate to a catalytic moiety. We report here on the first noble-metal free and covalent dye-catalyst assembly able to achieve photoelectrochemical visible light-driven H2 evolution in mildly acidic aqueous conditions when grafted onto p-type NiO electrode substrate.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Nicolas Kaeffer; Adina Morozan; Vincent Artero
We report here that a bioinspired cobalt diimine-dioxime molecular catalyst for hydrogen evolution immobilized onto carbon nanotube electrodes proves tolerant toward oxygen. The cobalt complex catalyzes O2 reduction with an onset potential of +0.55 V vs RHE. In this process, a mixture of water and hydrogen peroxide is produced in a 3:1 ratio. Our study evidences that such side-reductions have little impact on effectiveness of proton reduction by the grafted molecular catalyst which still displays good activity for H2 evolution in the presence of O2. The presence of O2 in the media is not detrimental toward H2 evolution under the conditions used, which simulate turn-on conditions of a water-splitting device.
Interface Focus | 2015
Julien Massin; Maximilian Bräutigam; Nicolas Kaeffer; Nicolas Queyriaux; Martin J. Field; Felix H. Schacher; Jürgen Popp; Murielle Chavarot-Kerlidou; Benjamin Dietzek; Vincent Artero
Moving from homogeneous water-splitting photocatalytic systems to photoelectrochemical devices requires the preparation and evaluation of novel p-type transparent conductive photoelectrode substrates. We report here on the sensitization of polystyrene-block-poly-(2-vinylpyridine) (PS-b-P2VP) diblock copolymer-templated NiO films with an organic push–pull dye. The potential of these new templated NiO film preparations for photoelectrochemical applications is compared with NiO material templated by F108 triblock copolymers. We conclude that NiO films are promising materials for the construction of dye-sensitized photocathodes to be inserted into photoelectrochemical (PEC) cells. However, a combined effort at the interface between materials science and molecular chemistry, ideally funded within a Global Artificial Photosynthesis Project, is still needed to improve the overall performance of the photoelectrodes and progress towards economically viable PEC devices.
Chemical Science | 2018
Nicolas Kaeffer; Christopher D. Windle; Romain Brisse; Corinne Gablin; Didier Leonard; Bruno Jousselme; Murielle Chavarot-Kerlidou; Vincent Artero
Co-grafting of a cobalt diimine–dioxime catalyst and push–pull organic dye on NiO yields a photocathode evolving hydrogen from aqueous solution under sunlight, with equivalent performances compared to a dyad-based architecture using similar components.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Christopher J. Wood; Gareth H. Summers; Charlotte A. Clark; Nicolas Kaeffer; Maximilian Braeutigam; Lea Roberta Carbone; Luca D'Amario; Ke Fan; Yoann Farré; Stéphanie Narbey; Frédéric Oswald; Lee A. Stevens; Christopher Parmenter; Michael W. Fay; Alessandro La Torre; Colin E. Snape; Benjamin Dietzek; Danilo Dini; Leif Hammarström; Yann Pellegrin; Fabrice Odobel; Licheng Sun; Vincent Artero; Elizabeth A. Gibson
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology C-photochemistry Reviews | 2015
Nicolas Queyriaux; Nicolas Kaeffer; Adina Morozan; Murielle Chavarot-Kerlidou; Vincent Artero
ACS Catalysis | 2016
Nicolas Kaeffer; Adina Morozan; Jennifer Fize; Eugénie Martinez; Laure Guetaz; Vincent Artero
Chemical Communications | 2016
Nathan Coutard; Nicolas Kaeffer; Vincent Artero