Water Splitting Reaction Mechanism on Transition Metal (Fe-Cu) Sulphide and Selenide Clusters-А DFT Study

Materials (Basel). 2023 Dec 22;17(1):56. doi: 10.3390/ma17010056.

Abstract

The tetracarbonyl complexes of transition metal chalcogenides M2X2(CO)4, where M = Fe, Co, Ni, Cu and X = S, Se, are examined by density functional theory (DFT). The M2X2 core is cyclic with either planar or non-planar geometry. As a sulfide, it is present in natural enzymes and has a selective redox capacity. The reduced forms of the selenide and sulfide complexes are relevant to the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) and they provide different positions of hydride ligand binding: (i) at a chalcogenide site, (ii) at a particular cation site and (iii) in a midway position forming equal bonds to both cation sites. The full pathway of water decomposition to molecular hydrogen and oxygen is traced by transition state theory. The iron and cobalt complexes, cobalt selenide, in particular, provide lower energy barriers in HER as compared to the nickel and copper complexes. In the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), cobalt and iron selenide tetracarbonyls provide a low energy barrier via OOH* intermediate. All of the intermediate species possess favorable excitation transitions in the visible light spectrum, as evidenced by TD-DFT calculations and they allow photoactivation. In conclusion, cobalt and iron selenide tetracarbonyl complexes emerge as promising photocatalysts in water splitting.

Keywords: DFT; ab initio methods; artificial photosynthesis; carbonyl complexes; chalcogenides; selenides; transition metal sulfides.

Grants and funding

This research received funding by TwinTeam project Д01-272 “European Network on Materials for Clean Technologies” for providing the opportunity to present the results at the SizeMat4 conference, as well as for the publication financial support and also thanks to the funding by the Bulgarian National Science Fund of Bulgarian Ministry of Education and Science, Grant КП-06-Н59/6 (2021), project (PhotoMetalMod).