Abstract

Earth-abundant chromophores and catalysts are important molecular building blocks for artificial photosynthesis applications. Our team previously reported that metal-free hydride donors, such as biomimetic benzoimidazole-based motifs, can reduce CO2 selectively to the formate ion and that they can be electrochemically regenerated using the proton-coupled mechanism. To enable direct utilization of solar energy, we report here the photochemical regeneration of a benzoimidazole-based hydride donor using a phenazine-based metal-free chromophore. The photochemical regeneration was investigated under different experimental conditions involving varying sacrificial donors, proton donors, solvents, and component concentrations. The best hydride regeneration yield of 50% was obtained with phenol as a proton source and thiophenolate as a sacrificial electron donor. The mechanism of photochemical regeneration was studied using steady-state and time-resolved UV/Vis spectroscopies. Based on the results of these studies, we hypothesize that the initial photoinduced electron transfer from photoexcited phenazine chromophores involves the benzoimidazole cation and that this process is likely coupled with proton transfer to generate protonated benzoimidazole-based radical cation. The second photoinduced electron transfer is hypothesized to generate the hydride form. Our findings provide the requisite information for the future development of reductive photocatalysts for solar energy and light-harvesting applications utilizing earth-abundant metal-free materials.

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