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Mapping proton and carbon dioxide electrocatalytic reductions at a Rh complex by in situ spectroelectrochemical NMR

A.-C. Kickab, M. Schatzac, C. Kahlb, M. Hölschera, R.-A. Eichelcde, J. Granwehr*ac, N. Kaeffer*bf and W. Leitner*ab
aInstitute of Technical and Macromolecular Chemistry, RWTH Aachen University, Worringerweg 2, 52074 Aachen, Germany
bMax-Planck-Institute for Chemical Energy Conversion, Stiftstraße 34-36, 45470 Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany. E-mail: walter.leitner@cec.mpg.de
cInstitute of Energy Technologies, Fundamental Electrochemistry (IET-1), Forschungszentrum Jülich, Wilhelm-Johnen-Straße, 52428 Jülich, Germany. E-mail: j.granwehr@fz-juelich.de
dInstitute of Physical Chemistry, RWTH Aachen University, Landoltweg 2, 52074 Aachen, Germany
eFaculty of Mechanical Engineering, RWTH Aachen University, Eilfschornstraße 18, 52062 Aachen, Germany
fUniversité de Strasbourg, Université de Haute-Alsace, CNRS, LIMA, UMR 7042, 67000 Strasbourg, France. E-mail: nkaeffer@unistra.fr

Received 30th July 2025 , Accepted 9th November 2025

First published on 10th November 2025


Abstract

Detailed molecular level understanding of organometallic electrocatalytic systems is required to fully exploit their technological potential to store, distribute, and utilise renewable energy in chemical form. However, in situ methods providing high resolution information on the structure and reactivity of transient intermediates remain challenging due to incompatible requirements for standard electrochemical and spectroscopic cell designs. Here, we demonstrate the use of spectroelectrochemical nuclear magnetic resonance (SEC-NMR) to enable operando characterisation of molecular species during organometallic electrocatalysis. The electroreduction of a prototypical molecular rhodium(+I) diphosphine complex was studied under aprotic conditions and in the presence of H2O and/or CO2. By combining multinuclear SEC-NMR, chemical reductions, modelling and simulations, we determine the involved species, their relative concentrations and the competing interconversions. The bielectronic reduction leading to the highly reactive low-valent rhodium(−I) intermediate and subsequent protonation of that species into a Rh–hydride complex was followed in a time-resolved manner. Deuterium labelling and ex situ NMR analysis after SEC-NMR electrolysis revealed that under aprotic conditions the proton source substantially arises from Hofmann elimination of the nBu4NPF6 electrolyte in addition to the acetonitrile solvent. The reactivities of the Rh(−I) and the Rh–H complexes were further monitored under turnover conditions, providing direct molecular insights into bifurcating electrocatalytic pathways for hydrogen evolution and CO2 reduction.


Introduction

Facing the challenging transition from a linear to a circular economy requires the development of novel catalytic processes at the interface of energy and chemistry.1 The defossilisation of the chemical value chain may be advanced by the use of green electricity for the conversion of sustainable carbon sources, among which carbon dioxide (CO2) is a major feedstock.2 Electrocatalytic reaction systems that directly transform renewable electrical energy into chemical energy carriers and products represent a key technology in this field.3–8 Organometallic electrocatalysts provide promising approaches for selective CO2 reduction, especially towards C1 products such as CO or HCOO.9,10 A fundamental parameter to control the bifurcation between these two products relates to CO2 reduction occurring either by direct electron transfer from the metal (ETM) or via insertion into a metal-hydride bond (ETH).4 The formation of metal-hydride species is also highly relevant for the competing hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). To map and eventually manipulate these reaction networks calls for the identification of key intermediates and their interconversion under catalytic conditions. These fundamental questions can be precisely addressed through in situ spectroscopic techniques, among which spectroelectrochemical nuclear magnetic resonance (SEC-NMR) has only been used to a limited extent until now despite its considerable potential.3,11–14 NMR experiments provide detailed information on the chemical environment of numerous nuclei, molecular compositions, exchange processes, spatial distributions or diffusion, just to mention the most commonly used protocols.15

Within the scope of organometallic electrocatalysis, we recently turned our attention to low-valent rhodium complexes. In particular, rhodium–phosphine complexes are known for high chemocatalytic activities and selectivities under thermal reaction conditions,16–22 which may transpose to or be complemented by electrochemical transformations. We were particularly drawn to the [Rh(dppe)2]+ (dppe: diphenylphosphinoethane) complex (noted RhI in the following) and the reduced congeners for which both ETH and ETM pathways have been inferred for chemo- and electrocatalytic CO2 reduction.23,24 With the availability of different NMR spectroscopic probes, namely 103Rh, 31P and 1,2H nuclei, we reasoned that SEC-NMR offers an ideal method to elucidate the nature of the involved reduced intermediates and their interconversion directly under electrocatalytic conditions.

The reduction of RhI to the corresponding [Rh(dppe)2] (Rh0) and [Rh(dppe)2] (Rh−I) congeners has been studied previously via chemical and electrochemical reactions.25 The chemical reduction of RhI using activated magnesium under strictly anhydrous conditions leads to Rh−I resulting in the formation of CO under CO2 atmosphere.24 On the other hand, the reaction of the Rh(I) hydride [RhH(dppe)2]0 (RhIH) with CO2 selectively yields the formate anion [RhI][HCO2].26 From these and similar ex situ studies, the intermediates during electrocatalytic turnover have been plausibly inferred. However, the formation of the RhIH hydride complex upon reduction of RhI has been the subject of insightful debates in the community.27–30 Pilloni and coll. stated a two-electron reduction of RhI into Rh−I, which was proposed to generate RhIH by deprotonation of the solvent (EEC-mechanism; E and C: electrochemical and chemical steps, respectively; Fig. 1A, q = 2).27,28 Eisenberg and coll. hypothesised an alternative route involving a one-electron reduction to [Rh(dppe)2] (Rh0) followed by hydrogen atom abstraction from acetonitrile leading to the formation of RhIH, while the second electron transfer converts the resulting solvent radical into the anion (ECE-mechanism; Fig. 1A, q = 1).30 The same group found later that the chemical reduction of RhI proceeds in two reduction steps leading to Rh−I that subsequently slowly converts to RhIH in the presence of acetonitrile,25 in line with the sequence initially reported by Pilloni and coll. In our recent systematic study on the bielectronic reduction of [Rh(dppe)2]+ and derivatives,31 we also found indications of irreversible reactions at the Rh−I stage with electrophiles in the reaction media. While these works allow drafting first mechanistic hypotheses, the sequence of reduction and protonation steps, the nature of the proton source, and the competition between ETH and ETM pathways for CO2 reduction are still lacking a detailed picture (Fig. 1B).


image file: d5sc05744b-f1.tif
Fig. 1 Use of (spectro)electrochemical methods for the elucidation of the reduction mechanism for [Rh(dppe)2]+ (A) and for the observation of intermediate species in the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 and H+ (B). Intermediates, reactions and products marked in green are observed with spectroelectrochemical methods within this work (C).

In this regard, NMR spectroscopy offers a high chemical selectivity, but has resolution and quantitativity impeded by electrically conductive components present in the sample space that alter the static magnetic field B0 and radio frequency field of the excitation pulses resulting in spatial variations of flip angles. Therefore, NMR has remained underexploited for operando analysis of electrochemical processes.32 More recently, specifically adapted cell designs have mitigated these inherent challenges, to open up new possibilities of SEC-NMR.32–42 Complementary to other in situ techniques, which often focus on the electrode vicinity,43–45 SEC-NMR enables a survey of the bulk analyte. This feature is central to study secondary or slow catalytic processes46 or to image exchange processes or pH as a function of electrode distance, as demonstrated for CO2 electrolysis.47,48 Up to now, however, liquid state SEC-NMR has primarily been used for redox studies of organic molecules.14,32,35 Only few SEC-NMR studies trace the redox behaviour of metal complexes, namely ferrocene and potassium ferrocyanide,11,12 leaving this field of research underexplored in homogeneous electrocatalysis.

Here, we demonstrate the general qualitative potential of SEC-NMR to elucidate electrocatalytic reaction mechanisms by deciphering in detail the reaction network involving proton and carbon dioxide electroreduction using RhI (Fig. 1C).

Results and discussion

Basic reduction behavior in the absence of added proton source

Recent reinvestigations of the electrochemical behaviour of RhI by some of us showed a reversible reduction wave at a halfwave potential E1/2 = −2.12 V vs. Fc+/0 (noted VFc). This reduction was assigned to the transfer of two electrons at inverted potentials (E0(RhI/0) < E0(Rh0/−I)) with concomitant rearrangement of the coordination geometry from square planar in RhI to tetrahedral in Rh−I (more background is provided in the reference).31 To obtain a more precise molecular picture of the processes underlying RhI/Rh−I reduction, we resorted to SEC-31P NMR experiments.

The experiments were performed in MeCN-d3, using nBu4NPF6 as electrolyte salt and THF-d8 as co-solvent in a 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1 ratio (Fig. 2A) to ensure good solubility of the RhIH complex. Before electrolysis, the pristine solution exhibited an NMR doublet centered at δ(31P) = 57.47 ppm (1JRh,P = 133.2 Hz) as typical signature of the starting RhI complex. Applying a constant cathodic current (−0.4 mA) led to the gradual decrease of the integral of that signal, evidencing consumption of RhI (SI, Fig. S9). The build-up of a doublet at δ(31P) = 59.27 ppm with a characteristic 1JRh,P-coupling constant of 203.2 Hz25,31 (Fig. 2A, S8 and 9) testifies to the formation of the Rh−I complex as further corroborated by chemical reduction experiments (SI, Fig. S45(a and b)).


image file: d5sc05744b-f2.tif
Fig. 2 SEC-31P NMR measurements during electrolysis of [Rh(dppe)2]NTf2 at −0.4 mA; nBu4NPF6, glassy carbon working electrode. The gradual colour change of the NMR spectra refers to measurements at proceeding time from t = 0 min (green) to t = 120 min (blue). Conditions: (A) Ar, MeCN-d3/THF-d8, spectra recorded every 10 minutes. (B) Ar, H2O (2 M), THF-d8, spectra recorded every 11 minutes. (C) CO2, MeCN, spectra recorded every 5 to 10 minutes. (D) CO2, H2O (2 M), THF-d8, spectra recorded every 7 to 15 minutes; the experiment was performed on a 400 MHz spectrometer. MeCN was used as solvent for comparison with CVs and preparative electrolysis. THF was added as co-solvent or used as solvent to prevent the precipitation of RhIH in pure MeCN.

In subsequent spectra, the disappearance of this signal and the simultaneous evolution of a doublet at δ(31P) = 55.22 ppm with 1JRh,P = 142.7 Hz, diagnostic of the RhIH complex,25 trace to the generation of this hydride species from the two-electron reduced Rh−I complex (Fig. 2A, S8 and 9). Ex situ analysis of the isolated reaction mixture after 2 hours of electrolysis evidenced a 1H resonance at δ(1H) = −10.71 ppm assigned to the previously identified RhIH (SI, Fig. S11 left).25 Over extended electrolysis time (after ca. 1 hour) an additional slightly shifted doublet at δ(31P) = 55.04 ppm with a much weaker Rh–P J-coupling (1JRh,P ≈ 103.4 Hz, SI Section 5.2.3) built up in the SEC-31P NMR, which can be assigned to [RhH(dppe)2(CD3CN)]2+ (RhIIIH) based on literature data.49 This interpretation is consolidated by SEC-1H NMR spectra that revealed a signal in the hydride region at δ(1H) = −15.82 ppm, attributed to RhIIIH (SI, Fig. S10) and by ex situ analysis of the isolated reaction mixture after 2 hours identifying RhIIIH as predominant hydride species in the reaction mixture (SI, Fig. S11). We posit that the formation of RhIIIH arises from the oxidation of RhIH formed at the cathode by diffusion to the anode counter electrode of the SEC-NMR cell.

Assuming quantitativity to first approximation, the cumulative integrals of all 31P NMR resonances in the 43–63 ppm window after 2 hours amounted to 74% of the starting value. This decay in 31P NMR-active signals may be due to the formation of intermediates in low concentrations remaining under the detection limit, small amounts of paramagnetic compounds or to the electrodeposition of complex. A Faradaic efficiency (F. E.) of 11% for the evolution of Rh−I is furthermore estimated from 31P NMR integration (SI, Section 5.3). While this value appears low, neither crossover nor catalytic turnover, viz. HER (vide infra), are accounted for.

Additional spectroelectrochemical analysis using SEC-UV/Vis at potentials negative to RhI reduction further corroborated the evolution of Rh−I and RhIH through partially convoluted signatures and the lack of detectable amounts of Rh0 (SI Section 5.1.2, Fig. S30 and Table S1).

The concentration profiles for the Rh species evolving during controlled potential electrolysis were modeled using a software for electrochemical simulation (DigiElch from ElchSoft) to visualise concentration profiles in the bulk, as monitored by SEC-NMR. Alongside plausible reaction steps and concentrations of introduced species, kinetic and thermodynamic parameters obtained from previous estimations50–53 were fed as input (SI Section 8). Concentration profiles for RhI, Rh−I and RhIH extending from the electrode surface (x = 0) into bulk (x > 0) after 120 minutes simulated electrolysis are shown in Fig. 3, assuming various possible concentrations of H+ for the protonation of Rh−I to RhIH.


image file: d5sc05744b-f3.tif
Fig. 3 Simulated concentration profiles of RhI (black under all conditions), Rh−I (red) and RhIH (blue) extending from the electrode surface (x = 0) into the bulk during controlled potential electrolysis of RhI (8.5 mM) at −2.5 VFc after 120 min. Increasing proton concentrations are indicated by fading colour.

First, the simulations indicate that the singly reduced Rh0 remains below relevant concentrations during electrolysis (SI, Fig. S50–57), corroborating results from SEC-UV/Vis. In the aprotic case ([H+] = 0 M), the doubly reduced Rh−I complex is, as expected, the only species obtained from RhI at the electrode and diffusing into the bulk (Fig. 3 and S50). Simulations at increasing proton concentrations ([H+]/[RhI] = 0.1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1, 0.5[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1 and 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1; Fig. 3 and S51–56) were performed using a rate constant for hydride formation of kf = 2.3 s−1 derived from cyclic voltammetry (see SI Sections 4 and 10.1 for extraction of kf). Already with substoichiometric proton concentrations, the hydride complex RhIH becomes clearly observable in the bulk of the medium after 20 minutes (SI, Fig. S51), in agreement with SEC-31P NMR spectra at reaction times >20 minutes. Experimentally, Rh−I and RhIH were detected in a concentration ratio of 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]5.6 in SEC-31P NMR spectra after two hours (SI, Fig. S9). Notably, RhIH is not observed at short reaction times <10 minutes by SEC-31P NMR, thus suggesting protons gradually abstracted from the mixture components over the course of the electrolysis rather than initially present from protic impurities. Comparing the experimental ratio of Rh−I and RhIH integrals with the respective integrals in simulated concentration profiles at low [H+], we roughly estimate an apparent proton concentration in the electrolyte solution of 4 mM in our experimental conditions (SI, Fig. S54, 55 and Table S2). This concentration can be understood as a time-averaged proton concentration released and accumulating in the analyte over 120 min electrolysis. Within the first 10 minutes of electrolysis, the experimental proton concentration is lower than this estimated concentration, while it is expected to be higher after 120 minutes.

We then investigated the origin of the protons involved in RhIH formation by deuterium labelling in SEC-NMR. Electrolysis performed with deuterated acetonitrile, CD3CN, led to the observation of hydride signals in the 1H NMR spectrum (vide supra). In addition, the corresponding 2H NMR spectrum only shows solvent signatures and no detectable peaks in the hydride region (SI, Fig. S12). These observations suggest 1H-protonation of Rh−I to [RhH(dppe)2] instead of formation of a [RhD(dppe)2] complex by putative deprotonation of CD3CN under our electrochemical conditions (Fig. 4, green reaction). Despite efforts to increase the detection limit of 2H NMR experiments (see SI, Section 5.2.1), we can yet not unambiguously exclude the presence of a deuteride complex and thus the role of CD3CN as a proton source purely based on 2H NMR.


image file: d5sc05744b-f4.tif
Fig. 4 Formation of the rhodium hydride complex [RhH(dppe)2] during electrolysis of [Rh(dppe)2]NTf2 at −0.4 mA in a MeCN-d3/THF-d8/nBu4NPF6 electrolyte as possible proton (nBu4N+) and deuterium (CD3CN) source. Of note, although RhID could not directly be observed here, reductive decomposition of acetonitrile was traced by 1H NMR spectroscopy, presumably giving rise to deuteron liberation from CD3CN upon formation of a putative “CD2CN” species and subsequent deuteration of Rh−I into RhID (dotted blue).

At the same time, the ex situ 1H NMR spectrum recorded after electrolysis features characteristic olefinic signals assigned to 1-butene, (E)/(Z)-2-butenes and not further specified species presumably forming upon reductive degradation of CD3CN (SI, Fig. S13, S41 and Section 5.2.3).54,55 The earlier species most plausibly result from the Hofmann elimination of the ammonium cation nBu4N+ of the electrolyte, yielding tributylamine, butene and a proton, while the later species are suspected, but not evidenced within this work, to liberate protons and thus contribute to hydride formation (Fig. 4, blue reaction; SI, Fig. S41–44 and Section 5.2.3).

These data collectively support that, under our electroreductive conditions, RhIH forms by reaction of the basic Rh−I with protons originating from cathodic degradation of both nBu4NPF6 and MeCN. Anodic processes providing additional protons were not further considered here. This result corroborates a previous study by Sofranko et al. showing that protons liberated by the decomposition of nBu4N+ in benzonitrile react with Rh−I to form RhIH and aligns with reports on MeCN serving as proton source particularly when used with perchlorate-based electrolytes (SI Section 5.2.3).25,30,56,59,60 As a side note, despite carefully anhydrous conditions, residual water (<30 ppm, H2O/RhI < 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]5) can marginally contribute to the formation of RhIH.

Spontaneous Hofmann elimination of the quaternary ammonium cation is a well-documented proton source under electrochemical conditions.57,58 However, in the absence of the RhI complex, olefinic butene signals are not detectable in the corresponding ex situ 1H NMR spectrum (SI, Fig. S29). Thus, direct attack by Rh−I at a β-H of nBu4N+ appears to be an operating pathway for RhIH formation under these conditions.

Reactivity with added water

We next investigated the effect of water on the electroreductive behaviour of RhI in THF-d8. Upon electrolysis with added water (2 M), SEC-31P NMR spectra show the evolution of the RhIH complex at 55.67 ppm aside from the signature of the RhI starting complex at 57.45 ppm (Fig. 2B, S16 and S19). SEC-1H NMR and ex situ 1H NMR spectra confirm the presence of RhIH with the diagnostic resonance at −10.56 ppm (SI, Fig. S17 and S18). Of note, Rh−I is not observed here likely due to a fast protonation of this highly reactive intermediate into RhIH in the protic environment. The transient nature of Rh−I under these reaction conditions is also supported by simulated concentration profiles showing no detectable concentrations in bulk at high H+ concentrations (SI, Fig. S57). In turn, substantial conversion of the initial complex leads to a 1[thin space (1/6-em)]:[thin space (1/6-em)]1 RhI/RhIH ratio at extended SEC-NMR electrolysis time (SI, Fig. S19).

The fast formation of RhIH from the reduced Rh−I complex is also corroborated by a complete loss of reversibility for the voltammetric reduction of RhI and the positive shift of the cathodic peak potential by 26 mV in the presence of water (Fig. 5, top). The anodic wave at −1.04 VFc in the backward scan is further attributed to the oxidation of RhIH most likely to RhIIIH as detected above in SEC-NMR (see Fig. 2A, S10 and 11).


image file: d5sc05744b-f5.tif
Fig. 5 Cyclic voltammograms of [Rh(dppe)2]NTf2. Conditions: 1 mM RhI in MeCN, 0.2 M nBu4NPF6, glassy carbon working electrode, 100 mV s−1.

We as well diagnosed hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) from the generated H2 signal at 4.54 ppm in the SEC-1H NMR spectra (SI, Fig. S17, right).61–64 Likely, HER arises from the protonation of RhIH. However, the accumulation of RhIH in the bulk of the SEC-cell indicates that this protonation is not very fast. In agreement, the lack of electrocatalytic current enhancement and the observation of RhIH oxidation (Fig. 5, top) both suggest a relatively high stability of the hydride species vs. water as the proton source. Fitting the experimental CV with simulated models allows for an estimation of the reaction rate constant for HER of kHER ≈ 0.06 s−1 (SI, Section 8, Fig. S59 and S60), substantially slower than hydride formation (kf = 2.3 s−1; SI, Sections 4 and 10.1).

Reactivity versus CO2 in the absence of added proton source

Exploring the high nucleophilicity of the reduced Rh−I species in electrocatalysis, we engaged SEC-NMR measurements during the electrolysis of RhI under CO2 atmosphere. In the absence of added water (Fig. 2C and S20, left), SEC-31P NMR shows that the RhI d8 complex is the prevalent species in the bulk solution, whereas the reduced Rh−I complex is not detected. CO2 is converted during the electrolysis, as supported by the decreasing integral of the corresponding 13C NMR signal (SI, Fig. S23). These observations point to a fast reaction of the reduced Rh species with CO2 under these conditions. Cyclic voltammetry supports this hypothesis, as the presence of CO2 turns the wave attributed to the RhI/−I couple into an irreversible event of catalytic character (Fig. 5, bottom), matching literature.23 The swift reductive disproportionation (RD) of CO2 to CO32− and CO reported at Rh−I also consolidates this interpretation.24

After ca. 20 minutes, the formation of trace RhIH is indicated by a tenuous doublet at 55.68 ppm, likely resulting from the reaction of Rh−I with protons of the electrolyte (vide supra). The presence of this compound can here either lead to HER as previously observed or may yield HCOO by CO2 reduction via a hydride pathway.3,4,65 Competing conversions of CO2 and H+ are indeed observed by headspace gas chromatography (GC) analysis of a bulk electrolysis that shows the evolution of CO together with H2 (F.E. 16.2 ± 5.7% and 51.4 ± 2.0%, respectively).

Reactivity versus CO2 with added water

When H2O is added to the reaction mixture under CO2 atmosphere, the evolution of RhIH aside RhI is not apparent anymore in SEC-31P NMR spectra over 2 hours (Fig. 2D). Ex situ analysis with improved signal-to-noise ratio after electrolysis only traces the presence of RhIH in low concentrations (Fig. S20, right and S22). This high RhI/RhIH ratio relative to the experiment performed under Ar indicates that the reactivity of RhIH is exacerbated in presence of CO2, as also inferred from the loss of the voltammetric oxidation wave of RhIH in CV (Fig. 5, bottom).

Two hypotheses can be raised to account for this behaviour that likely overlap: (a) RhIH is more reactive towards CO2 insertion than towards protonation by H2O, leading to HCOO as previously reported65 and observed under purely chemical conditions (Fig. S47); (b) the presence of CO2 generates a more acidic proton source in the form of H2CO3, speeding up protonation of RhIH and hence HER. These competing reactivities of RhIH are apparent from formate signals in ex situ 1H and 13C NMR spectra after SEC-electrolysis (SI Fig. S25) and from H2 detection in the gas phase of a bulk electrolysis experiment (F.E. 69.7%). Only small amounts of CO (F. E. 6.2%) were also detected in the gas phase, while formate formation was assumed but could not unambiguously be confirmed in the performed bulk experiments.

The redirection of the reactivity versus CO2 in the presence of water is also reflected by the loss of cathodic peak current enhancement in CV and the anodic shift of the reduction wave by 26 mV. The effect of added water likely arises from the preference of protonation over CO2 coordination at the Rh−I complex. However, subsequent reaction steps in the ETH pathway can overall decelerate kinetics for the electrocatalytic cycles.

Discussion of mechanistic pathways

Based on our experimental observations, we further documented possible ETH and ETM reaction pathways for the electrocatalytic activation of CO2 at Rh−I with energy profiles computed by density functional theory (DFT) methods (Fig. 6, S48 and 49).4 As the observed electrocatalytic turnover at room temperature already indicates reasonably accessible energy barriers, we did not perform time-consuming transition state computations within this work, but only focused on intermediate state energies to retrace the thermodynamic driving force of this reactivity. We also excluded, as a first approximation, pathways involving the singly reduced Rh0 congener, due to the lack of experimental evidence for the formation of this species and the reported low reactivity of Rh0 contrasting the high one noticed for Rh−I.25
image file: d5sc05744b-f6.tif
Fig. 6 Left: Possible reaction pathways for electrocatalytic reactions from RhI with H+ and CO2 following general ETM, ETH and HER mechanisms. Highlighted intermediates, reactions and products were identified by (spectro)electrochemical experiments. Right: Energy profiles for the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 following the ETH (blue) or the ETM (red, water as byproduct is not depicted here) pathways. Only energies of intermediates are depicted. Energies were computed with uMN12L/def2-TZVP in acetonitrile and are given in kcal mol−1.

In the ETM pathway, the initial attack of CO2 by Rh−I resulting in the η1-CO2 complex RhI-CO2 is slightly endergonic by 6.3 kcal mol−1. Under protic conditions, the protonations following RhI-CO2 and yielding water and the carbonyl complex RhI-CO are computed as strongly driven. Yet, whether or not water is added, RhI-CO2, RhI-CO or other intermediates of the ETM sequence are not detected in the SEC-NMR. This fact suggests that either ETM is not operative or, if this pathway is operative, CO readily dissociates from the pentacoordinated complex into the gas phase forming the square planar 16-electron complex RhI as most abundant reaction intermediate. Our data, in agreement with previous reports,24 yet indicate that a reductive disproportionation leading to CO and CO32− is favoured in aprotic conditions and the cumulated rates of the ETM/RD mechanism are high enough to lead to the marked electrocatalytic behaviour observed in voltammetry. In protic conditions, involvement of [RhI(dppe)2(CO2)] as entry to the ETM mechanism cannot be discarded but is less favoured as apparent from smaller amounts of CO as reduction product of CO2 detected after electrolysis.

In the alternative ETH mechanistic cycle, the initial formation of the rhodium hydride RhIH from Rh−I is highly exergonic (−65.5 kcal mol−1) in line with experimental observations (vide supra). The reaction of this intermediate with CO2 or H+ would then lead respectively to HCOO (in a dissociated complex) or H2 in competing HER and eventually to RhI in both cases. These downstream reactions are all computed exergonic and pinpoint to fast and driven chemical reaction steps, while the electrochemical reduction step requires higher energy input. Thus, DFT computations support RhI as resting state in agreement with SEC-NMR experiments showing this complex as major species during electrolysis in the presence of H2O and CO2.

Under experimental aprotic reaction conditions, RhIH, which SEC-NMR reveals to be generated in low concentrations likely from Hofmann elimination of the electrolyte salt and deprotonation of MeCN (vide supra), can give rise to an operative ETH route. Under protic conditions, the substantial change in the CV response indicates ETH as the most favoured route. While the hydride complex readily forms, the kinetics for RhIH conversion becomes fast enough that this intermediate does not accumulate in the bulk but slow enough that electrocatalysis is not observed at the voltammetric timescale. A switch from a predominant faster ETM/RD to slower ETH as the concentration in proton source is increased also matches the loss in activity observed upon titrating water in the CV experiments (Fig. S33). Although turning over at much slower rates, the ETH route diverts from or blocks the ETM/RD in virtue of the strong driving force to the RhIH intermediate.

As a note, ECEC pathways involving further reduction of RhI-CO2H, RhI-CO and RhIH have been discarded in a first approximation, due to the quite negative values computed for the corresponding potentials (E0(RhI-CO2H/Rh0-CO2H) = −2.61 VFc; E0(RhI-CO/Rh0-CO) = −2.32 VFc; E0(RhIH/Rh0H) = −2.84 VFc; SI, Fig. S48, 49 and Section 7).

Conclusions

By SEC-NMR, we were able to characterise and monitor the two-electron reduction of [Rh(dppe)2]+ RhI into [Rh(dppe)2] Rh−I followed by protonation to the hydride complex RhIH under electrolysis conditions, according to an overall EEC mechanism. Isotope labelling experiments and ex situ 1H NMR analysis after SEC-NMR revealed that the proton results from Hofmann elimination of the cation in nBu4NPF6 electrolyte and from MeCN degradation under aprotic conditions. Under electrocatalytic CO2 reduction, RhI is the only observable species indicating fast reductive disproportionation at Rh−I leading to CO as the preferred C1 product. In the presence of added water, formate is formed from CO2 in competition with H2 evolution. The inferred RhIH as key intermediate can be detected by ex situ NMR and as main species under SEC NMR in presence of only water. Hydrogen evolution outperforms CO2 reduction reaching Faradaic efficiency of 69.7%, indicating that protonation of the Rh–H moiety is favoured over CO2 insertion. These results come in perspective of the high reactivity of rhodium hydride complexes towards CO2 insertion as a crucial step in thermo-catalytic CO2 hydrogenation towards formic acid/formates.

Our study hence highlights the analytical power of SEC-NMR to elucidate intermediates and mechanisms in organometallic electrocatalysis. The resulting molecular understanding can form the basis of further investigations aiming at integration of the ETM pathway under electrochemical conditions with other organometallic catalytic cycles beyond C1 products.

Author contributions

A.-C. K., M. S., J. G., N. K. and W. L. designed the project. A.-C. K. performed synthetic works, spectroscopic characterisations, CV studies, chemical reduction experiments and DFT computations. M. S. conducted spectroelectrochemical NMR measurements. C. K. performed spectroelectrochemical UV/Vis experiments and electrolysis. N. K. initiated and A.-C. K. completed DigiElch simulations. A.-C. K, M. S. and N. K. analysed the data. M. H., R.-A. E., J. G., N. K. and W. L. supervised the project. A.-C. K. and N. K. drafted the manuscript, which was edited by contributions of all authors.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts to declare.

Data availability

UV/Vis and TopSpin raw data, DFT xyz and output files and GC data are available on the Jülich DATA repository (https://doi.org/10.26165/JUELICH-DATA/KJN10U). All other data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding authors upon reasonable request.

Supplementary information: experimental procedures, (spectroelectrochemical) NMR and UV/Vis spectra, cyclic voltammograms and related plots for extraction of kinetic data, DFT computed energy profiles and simulated CV and electrolysis data are available in the SI. The authors have cited additional references within the SI.25,28,30,31,40,50–53,56,59,60,66–80 See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d5sc05744b.

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge basic support from the Max Planck Society and the RWTH Aachen University and funding from the Deutsche Forschungsgesellschaft (DFG) under Germany's Excellence Strategy – Exzellenzcluster 2186 “The Fuel Science Center” – ID: 390919832. N. K. acknowledges support by CNRS through CPJ METHOD-CHEM. The authors thank P. Philipp M. Schleker for fruitful discussions.

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