Coordination Engineering in Single-atom Covalent Organic Frameworks Photocatalysts for Solar-Driven Nitrogen Fixation

Abstract

Single-atom covalent organic frameworks (COFs) provide a modular platform for the photocatalytic nitrogen reduction reaction (NRR), yet the mechanistic interplay between local coordination environments and catalytic performance remains insufficiently understood. Herein, we employ spin-polarized density functional theory to unravel structure-function relationships in a series of metal-phthalocyanine-like single-atom catalysts (TM@pdiCOF, TM = Fe, Co, Ni) and their N-doped derivatives.Our calculations reveal that side-on N₂ adsorption yields superior activation through enhanced charge transfer, driven by a characteristic donation-back-donation interaction between N₂ and metal d-orbitals as elucidated by -pCOHP/ICOHP analyses.Thermodynamic profiles constructed within the computational hydrogen electrode framework identify the initial protonation (*NN → *NNH) as the potential-determining step. Coordination engineering via ligand N-doping systematically tailors the local metal environment, significantly lowering the limiting potentials (UL), achieving competitive values of -0.59 V, -0.42 V, and -0.76 V for Fe@NpdiCOF, Co@3NpdiCOF, and Ni@2NpdiCOF, respectively, while thermodynamically suppressing the competing hydrogen evolution reaction. Furthermore, this heteroatom doping strategy induces a synergistic optimization of photophysical properties, manifesting as a pronounced spectral blue shift and moderate band-gap narrowing to enhance visible-light harvesting. These insights establish ligand modulation as a robust design principle to concurrently optimize reaction energetics and optical properties for efficient solar-driven nitrogen fixation.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Jan 2026
Accepted
09 Mar 2026
First published
10 Mar 2026

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Coordination Engineering in Single-atom Covalent Organic Frameworks Photocatalysts for Solar-Driven Nitrogen Fixation

W. Li, H. Wu, L. Wu, Y. Hu, Y. Ye, D. Liu, D. Li, Y. Zhang, Z. Ma and R. Sa, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6CP00037A

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