Laura M. Kiefer, Lindsay B. Michocki, and Kevin J. Kubarych
Unraveling electrocatalytic mechanisms, as well as fundamental structural dynamics of intermediates, requires spectroscopy with high time and frequency resolution that can account for nonequilibrium in situconcentration changes inherent to electrochemistry. Two-dimensional infrared (2D-IR) spectroscopy is an ideal candidate, but several technical challenges have hindered development of this powerful tool for spectroelectrochemistry (SEC). We demonstrate a transmission-mode, optically transparent thin-layer electrochemical (OTTLE) cell adapted to 2D-IR-SEC to monitor the important Re(bpy)(CO)3Cl CO2-reduction electrocatalyst. 2D-IR-SEC reveals pronounced differences in both spectral diffusion time scales and spectral inhomogeneity in the singly reduced catalyst, [Re(bpy)(CO)3Cl]•–, relative to the starting Re(bpy)(CO)3Cl. Cross-peaks between well-resolved symmetric vibrations and congested low-frequency bands enable direct assignment of all distinct species during the electrochemical reaction. With this information, 2D-IR-SEC provides new mechanistic insights regarding unproductive, catalyst-degrading dimerization. 2D-IR-SEC opens new experimental windows into the electrocatalysis foundation of future energy conversion and greenhouse gas reduction.