Abstract
In this study, we investigate the key mechanistic steps of the photocatalytic deoxygenation of nitrous oxide (N₂O), a significant greenhouse gas, and pyridine N-oxide (PNO), an important intermediate in pharmaceutical synthesis, using rhenium(I) tricarbonyl bipyridine complex, [ReI(bpy)(CO)₃Cl] (Re-Cl), in the presence of a sacrificial electron donor (DIPEA). Optimisation of the reaction conditions revealed that the addition of water (3 M) enhances catalytic efficiency, particularly for PNO reduction, suggesting a crucial role of proton availability in facilitating N–O bond cleavage. Through a combination of techniques such as nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, NMR, infrared spectroscopy, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we elucidate the mechanism of this photocatalytic transformation. The reaction is initiated by photoexcitation of the Re-Cl complex, followed by reductive quenching by DIPEA, generating the singly reduced species (1ERS), which serves as the catalytically active species. The deoxygenation mechanism proceeds via proton-assisted N–O bond cleavage, forming a metal-hydroxo intermediate. The rate-limiting step is identified as the electron transfer to the substrate. The presence of water facilitates proton transfers and ligand exchanges during PNO photodeoxygenation but has no significant impact on N₂O reduction.
Supplementary materials
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Experimental and computational details
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Experimental and computational details
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Title
XYZ coordinates
Description
XYZ coordinates of all computed structures
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