Reversible Interconversion of Carbon Dioxide and Formate by an Electroactive Enzyme
Carbon dioxide (CO₂) is a kinetically and thermodynamically stable molecule. It is easily formed by the oxidation of organic molecules, during combustion or respiration, but is difficult to reduce. The production of reduced carbon compounds from CO₂ is an attractive proposition, because carbon-neutr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2008-08, Vol.105 (31), p.10654-10658 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Carbon dioxide (CO₂) is a kinetically and thermodynamically stable molecule. It is easily formed by the oxidation of organic molecules, during combustion or respiration, but is difficult to reduce. The production of reduced carbon compounds from CO₂ is an attractive proposition, because carbon-neutral energy sources could be used to generate fuel resources and sequester CO₂ from the atmosphere. However, available methods for the electrochemical reduction of CO₂ require excessive overpotentials (are energetically wasteful) and produce mixtures of products. Here, we show that a tungsten-containing formate dehydrogenase enzyme (FDH1) adsorbed to an electrode surface catalyzes the efficient electrochemical reduction of CO₂ to formate. Electrocatalysis by FDH1 is thermodynamically reversible-only small overpotentials are required, and the point of zero net catalytic current defines the reduction potential. It occurs under thoroughly mild conditions, and formate is the only product. Both as a homogeneous catalyst and on the electrode, FDH1 catalyzes CO₂ reduction with a rate more than two orders of magnitude faster than that of any known catalyst for the same reaction. Formate oxidation is more than five times faster than CO₂ reduction. Thermodynamically, formate and hydrogen are oxidized at similar potentials, so formate is a viable energy source in its own right as well as an industrially important feedstock and a stable intermediate in the conversion of CO₂ to methanol and methane. FDH1 demonstrates the feasibility of interconverting CO₂ and formate electrochemically, and it is a template for the development of robust synthetic catalysts suitable for practical applications. |
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ISSN: | 0027-8424 1091-6490 |
DOI: | 10.1073/pnas.0801290105 |