Toward Combined Carbon Capture and Recycling: Addition of an Amine Alters Product Selectivity from CO to Formic Acid in Manganese Catalyzed Reduction of CO 2

Owing to the energetic cost associated with CO release in carbon capture (CC), the combination of carbon capture and recycling (CCR) is an emerging area of research. In this approach, "captured CO ," typically generated by addition of amines, serves as a substrate for subsequent reduction....

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2020-10, Vol.142 (41), p.17589-17597
Hauptverfasser: Bhattacharya, Moumita, Sebghati, Sepehr, VanderLinden, Ryan T, Saouma, Caroline T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Owing to the energetic cost associated with CO release in carbon capture (CC), the combination of carbon capture and recycling (CCR) is an emerging area of research. In this approach, "captured CO ," typically generated by addition of amines, serves as a substrate for subsequent reduction. Herein, we report that the reduction of CO in the presence of morpholine (generating mixtures of the corresponding carbamate and carbamic acid) with a well-established Mn electrocatalyst changes the product selectivity from CO to H and formate. The change in selectivity is attributed to generation of the morpholinium carbamic acid, which is sufficiently acidic to protonate the reduced Mn species and generate an intermediate Mn hydride. Thermodynamic studies indicate that the hydride is not sufficiently hydritic to reduce CO to formate, unless the apparent hydricity, which encompasses formate binding to the Mn, is considered. Increasing steric bulk around the Mn shuts down rapid homolytic H evolution rendering the intermediate Mn hydride more stable; subsequent CO insertion appears to be faster than heterolytic H production. A comprehensive mechanistic scheme is proposed that illustrates how thermodynamic analysis can provide further insight. Relevant to a range of hydrogenations and reductions is the modulation of the hydricity with substrate binding that makes the reaction favorable. Significantly, this work illustrates a new role for amines in CO reduction: changing the product selectivity; this is pertinent more broadly to advancing CCR.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.0c07763