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Electron transfer reactions are central to many diverse areas of chemistry such as solar energy conversion, catalytic processes, synthetic procedures, chemical biology pathways. We are interested in the redox properties of compounds many of which contain a transition metal. These properties may be influenced by solvent, electrolyte or temperature. In addition, changing a substituent on a ligand or the metal centre may result in wholesale changes to the electrochemical properties which permit redox tuning of materials. Electron transfer may be reversible, in which case we can probe the site of electron transfer by uv/vis/nir, ir or epr spectroscopy, or irreversible where we study the kinetics and mechanism of new product formation. For example, in situ epr spectroelectrochemical study of reduced 4-NO2-2,2’-bpy and Pt(4-NO2-2,2’-bpy)Cl2 revealed that the unpaired electron coupled more strongly to the NO2 nitrogen in the free pro-ligand but to the pyridine ring nitrogen in the coordinated compound.
We have recently developed a new system to carry out in-situ W- and Q-band EPR spectroscopy. The set-up involves using three PTFE coated wires with the PTFE stripped off at the tips. This allows us to record reproducible spectra of compounds which have been oxidised/reduced in cells as small as a capillary tube. The initial results on the in-house X-band spectrometer are very encouraging and we will soon be testing the system on Q- and W-band spectrometers. This project will utilise the facilities held at the University of Manchester.
Diagram of the set-up for in-situ Q- and W-band EPR spectroelectrochemistry SELECTED RECENT PUBLICATIONS
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School of Chemistry, Joseph Black Building, West Mains Road, Edinburgh,
Scotland EH9 3JJ. Tel : +44 (0)131 650 7546 , Fax : +44 (0)131 650 6453. Published by EaStCHEM webmaster. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, all material is copyright © EaStCHEM. |
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