Robert D. Richardson
Cardiff University
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Featured researches published by Robert D. Richardson.
Nature Chemistry | 2011
Robert D. Richardson; Edward James Holland; Barry K. Carpenter
Photochemical reduction of CO₂ (to produce formic acid) can be seen both as a method to produce a transportable hydrogen-based fuel and also to reduce levels of CO₂ in the atmosphere. However, an often overlooked necessity for photochemical CO₂ reduction is the need for a sacrificial electron donor, usually a tertiary amine. Here, we describe a new strategy for coupling the photochemical reduction of CO₂ to photochemical water splitting, and illustrate this with a prototype example. Instead of seeking to eliminate the use of an external reducing agent altogether, our alternative strategy makes the reducing agent recyclable. This has two potential advantages over the direct coupling of CO₂ reduction and water oxidation. First, it allows the two redox reactions to be carried out with existing chemistry, and second, it permits these reactions to be conducted under mutually incompatible conditions.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Robert D. Richardson; Barry K. Carpenter
A computational study, using density functional theory calibrated against higher-level methods, has been undertaken to evaluate tertiary amines whose radical cations might lose hydrogen atoms from positions other than the alpha carbons. The purpose was to find photochemically activated reducing agents for carbon dioxide that could be regenerated in a separate photochemical reaction. The calculations have revealed two reactions that might be suitable for this purpose. In one, the nitrogen of the radical cation makes a bond to a remote carbon with simultaneous displacement of a hydrogen atom. In the other, a remote hydrogen atom is transferred to the nitrogen, thereby creating a distonic radical cation that can lose a hydrogen atom beta to the radical site. The latter reaction is found to be particularly favorable since it apparently involves a surface crossing that allows the amine radical cation and CO2 radical anion to transform smoothly to a ground-state formate ion and an alkene. A number of structural motifs are investigated for the amines. The lower ionization potential of aromatic amines, compared to their aliphatic analogues, is desirable in that it could permit the use of longer wavelength light to drive the reaction. However, a thermochemical cycle shows that the reduction in ionization potential must be matched by an increase in proton affinity of the amine if the intramolecular hydrogen transfer is to be exothermic. Most aromatic amines do not satisfy this criterion and, hence, would have to rely on the displacement reaction for hydrogen-atom release if they were to be used as renewable reagents for CO2 reduction. Examples of specific aromatic and aliphatic tertiary amines that should be suitable for the purpose are presented, and their relative merits and weaknesses are discussed.
Angewandte Chemie | 2006
Robert D. Richardson; Thomas Wirth
Angewandte Chemie | 2006
Robert D. Richardson; Thomas Wirth
European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008
Sabine Altermann; Robert D. Richardson; T. Keri Page; Ruth K. Schmidt; Edward James Holland; Umal Mohammed; Shauna M. Paradine; Andrew N. French; Christine Richter; A. Masih Bahar; Bernhard Witulski; Thomas Wirth
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2007
Robert D. Richardson; Magalie Desaize; Thomas Wirth
Angewandte Chemie | 2007
Robert D. Richardson; Jameel M. Zayed; Sabine Altermann; Daniel J. Smith; Thomas Wirth
Angewandte Chemie | 2007
Robert D. Richardson; Jameel M. Zayed; Sabine Altermann; Daniel J. Smith; Thomas Wirth
Synlett | 2007
Robert D. Richardson; T. Keri Page; Sabine Altermann; Shauna M. Paradine; Andrew N. French; Thomas Wirth
Chemie in Unserer Zeit | 2008
Robert D. Richardson; Thomas Wirth