Abstract

The spectroscopic and redox properties of iron(lll) protoporphyrin chloride (hemin) and cobalt(lll) meso-tetra-(4-carboxyphenyl) porphyrin chloride (CoTCP) were quantified in fluid solution and when anchored to mesoporous nanocrystalline TiO2 thin films. Surface binding was well-described by the Langmuir adsorption isotherm model from which adduct formation constants of 10(5) M(-1) and limiting surface coverages of 10(-8) mol/cm2 were abstracted. In acetonitrile and dimethyl sulfoxide electrolytes, TiO2 binding was found to induce a substantial negative shift in the M(III/II) formal reduction potentials. In DMSO electrolyte, the Co(III/II) and Fe(III/II) potentials were -559 and -727 mV versus ferrocenium/ferrocene (Fc+/Fc) and shifted to -782 and -1063 mV, respectively, after surface binding. The Bronsted acidity of the TiO2 surface was found to correlate with the measured reduction potentials. For TiO2 pretreated with aqueous solutions from pH 4-9, the Co(III/II) potential showed a -66 mV/pH unit change, while the Fe(llI/II) potential of hemin changed by -40 mV/pH from pH 1 to 14. Spectroelectrochemical data gave isosbestic, reversible spectral changes in the visible region assigned to M(III/II) redox chemistry with lambda(iso) = 410, 460, 530, 545, 568, and 593 nm for CoTCP/TiO2 and lambda(iso) = 408, 441, 500, 576, and 643 nm for hemin/TiO2. In aqueous solution, the CoTCP reduction potentials were also found to be pH dependent upon surface binding, with CoTCP = -583 mV and CoTCP/TiO2 = -685 mV versus Fc+/Fc at pH 6. For CoTCP/TiO2, the aqueous pH dependence of the potentials was -52 mV/pH. The rate constant for heme/TiO2 reduction of CCl4 increased from 3.9 +/- 0.7 x 10(-4) to 2.0 +/- 0.1 x 10(-3) s(-1) when the pH was raised from 4 to 8.

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