Abstract
A proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reaction was widely studied with isolated organic molecules and metal complexes in solution in view of the biological catalytic reaction, while studying this reaction in the crystalline or solid-state phase, which has a novel example, would give insight into the rather internal environment of proteins without solvation and a creation of new molecular materials. We tried to crystallize a hydrogen-bonded (H-bonded) coordination polymer with one-dimensional nanoporous channels, formed from redox-active RuIII complexes, [RuIII(Hbim)3] (Hbim- = 2,2'-biimidazolate monoanion). As a result, a synchronized collective PCET phenomenon was observed for the molecular nanoporous crystal by novel solid-state cyclic voltammetry (CV), which could be measured by only setting some crystals on the electrode surface. The nanoporous crystals, {[RuIII(Hbim)3]}n (1), are simultaneously induced to a synchronized collective RuIIRuIII mixed-valence state, {RuIIRuIII}n, with alternating arrays of RuII and RuIII complexes by PCET in a way of the reductive state of {RuIIRuII}n. Further, a new crystal with {RuIIRuIII}n, {[RuII(H2bim)(Hbim)2][RuIII(bim) (Hbim)2][K(MeOBz)6]}n (2), was also prepared, and the solid-state CV revealed the same electrochemical behavior of {RuIIRuIII}n with 1. The single crystal with {RuIIRuIII}n of 2 was unusually a semiconductor with 5.12 × 10-6 S/cm conductivity at 298 K by an impedance method (8.01 × 10-6 S/cm by a direct-current method at 277 K). Thus, an unprecedented electron-hopping conductor driven by a low-barrier proton transfer through a PCET mechanism (Ea = 0.30 eV) was realized in the H-bonding molecular crystal with {RuIIRuIII}n. Such studies on a PCET reaction in the crystalline state is not only worthwhile as a model of essential biological reactions without solvation, but also proposed to a new design of molecular materials to occur an electron transfer by using an intermolecular H-bond.
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