A highly active copper catalyst for the hydrogenation of carbon dioxide to formate under ambient conditions.

Dalton Trans

Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry and Centre for Nanoscience, University of Missouri-St. Louis, One University Boulevard, St. Louis, MO 63121-4499, USA.

Published: March 2020

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is an important reactant and can be used for the syntheses of various types of industrially important chemicals. Hence, investigation concerning the conversion of CO2 into valuable energy-rich chemicals is an important and current topic in molecular catalysis. Recent research on molecular catalysts has led to improved rates for conversion of CO2 to energy-rich products such as formate, but the catalysts based on first-row transition metals are underdeveloped. Copper(i) complexes containing the 1,1'-bis(di-tert-butylphosphino) ferrocene ligand were found to promote the catalytic hydrogenation of CO2 to formate in the presence of DBU as the base, where the catalytic conversion of CO2via hydrogenation is achieved using in situ gaseous H2 (granulated tin metal and concentrated HCl) to produce valuable energy-rich chemicals, and therefore it is a promising, safe and simple strategy to conduct reactions under ambient pressure at room temperature. Towards this goal, we report an efficient copper(i) complex based catalyst [CuI(dtbpf)] to achieve ambient-pressure CO2 hydrogenation catalysis for generating the formate salt (HCO2-) with turnover number (TON) values of 326 to 1.065 × 105 in 12 to 48 h of reaction at 25 °C to 80 °C. The outstanding catalytic performance of [CuI(dtbpf)] makes it a potential candidate for realizing the large-scale production of formate by CO2 hydrogenation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9dt04662cDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

carbon dioxide
8
conversion co2
8
valuable energy-rich
8
energy-rich chemicals
8
co2 hydrogenation
8
co2
6
hydrogenation
5
formate
5
highly active
4
active copper
4

Similar Publications

One-step adsorptive purification of ethylene (C2H4) from ternary mixture comprising of acetylene (C2H2), ethylene (C2H4) and carbon dioxide (CO2) is a great challenge in the chemical industry. Herein, a microporous metal-organic framework (FJI-H38) has been reported, which possesses a high density of electronegative O/N binding sites and appropriate pore size. Notably, at 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Carbon dioxide capture underpins an important range of technologies that can help to mitigate climate change. Improved carbon capture technologies that are driven by electrochemistry are under active development, and it was recently found that supercapacitor energy storage devices can reversibly capture and release carbon dioxide. So-called supercapacitive swing adsorption (SSA) has several advantages over traditional carbon dioxide capture technologies such as lower energy consumption and the use of nontoxic materials.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Quantifying how co-acting global change factors (GCFs) influence plant invasion is crucial for predicting future invasion dynamics. We did a meta-analysis to assess pairwise effects of five GCFs (elevated CO, drought, eutrophication, increased rainfall and warming) on native and alien plants. We found that alien plants, compared to native plants, suffered less or benefited more for four of the eight pairwise GCF combinations, and that all GCFs acted additively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The increased use of dairy fat in various applications is facilitated by its fractionation into hard and liquid fractions. Herein, the fractionation of bovine ghee and buffalo ghee was investigated, and triacylglycerol (TAG) profiles of milk fat fractions and 2 categories of infant formulas fat were quantified by using ultra-performance convergence chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPC-Q-TOF-MS) using carbon dioxide as the mobile phase. Furthermore, the thermal behavior of the different samples was evaluated, and tocopherols content was also quantified.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The maritime transport sector poses significant air quality concerns, particularly in nearby cities. Ultrafine particles (UFP, diameter < 100 nm) are of particular concern due to their potential health impacts. This study measured particle number concentrations (PNC), size distributions (PNSD), and other pollutants including particulate matter (PM), nitrogen oxides (NO), black carbon (BC), sulfur dioxide (SO) and ozone (O), organic markers and trace elements at a major European harbor and an urban background (UB) location.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!