Strong Impact of Platinum Surface Structure on Primary and Secondary Alcohol Oxidation during Electro-Oxidation of Glycerol

Herein we describe a combined experimental and computational study of electrochemical glycerol oxidation in acidic media on Pt(111) and Pt(100) electrodes. Our results show that glycerol oxidation is a very structure-sensitive reaction in terms of activity and, more surprisingly, in terms of selecti...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS catalysis 2016-07, Vol.6 (7), p.4491-4500
Hauptverfasser: Garcia, Amanda C, Kolb, Manuel J, van Nierop y Sanchez, Chris, Vos, Jan, Birdja, Yuvraj Y, Kwon, Youngkook, Tremiliosi-Filho, Germano, Koper, Marc T. M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Herein we describe a combined experimental and computational study of electrochemical glycerol oxidation in acidic media on Pt(111) and Pt(100) electrodes. Our results show that glycerol oxidation is a very structure-sensitive reaction in terms of activity and, more surprisingly, in terms of selectivity. Using a combination of online HPLC and online electrochemical mass spectrometry, we show that on the Pt(111) electrode, glyceraldehyde, glyceric acid, and dihydroxyacetone are products of glycerol oxidation, while on the Pt(100) electrode, only glyceraldehyde was detected as the main product of the reaction. Density functional theory calculations show that this difference in selectivity is explained by different binding modes of dehydrogenated glycerol to the two surfaces. On Pt(111), the dehydrogenated glycerol intermediate binds to the surface through two single Pt–C bonds, yielding an enediol-like intermediate, which serves as a precursor to both glyceraldehyde and dihydroxyacetone. On Pt(100), the dehydrogenated glycerol intermediate binds to the surface through one double PtC bond, yielding glyceraldehyde as the only product. Stripping and in situ FTIR measurements show that CO is not the only strongly bound adsorbed intermediate of the oxidation of glycerol, glyceraldehyde, and dihydroxyacetone. Although the nature of this adsorbate is still unclear, this intermediate is highly resistant to oxidation and can only be removed from the Pt surface after multiple scans.
ISSN:2155-5435
2155-5435
DOI:10.1021/acscatal.6b00709