Modulating the Coverage of Adsorbed Hydrogen via Hydrogen Spillover Enables Selective Electrocatalytic Hydrogenation of Phenol to Cyclohexanone

Selective electrocatalytic hydrogenation (ECH) of phenol is a sustainable route to produce cyclohexanone, an industrially important feedstock for polymer synthesis. However, attaining high selectivity and faradaic efficiency (FE) for cyclohexanone remain challenging, owning to over-hydrogenation of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2024-12, p.e202419178
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Yuanbo, Ji, Kaiyue, Wang, Xi, Shi, Qiujin, Li, An-Zhen, Yin, Zhuoqun, Zhu, Yu-Quan, Duan, Haohong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Selective electrocatalytic hydrogenation (ECH) of phenol is a sustainable route to produce cyclohexanone, an industrially important feedstock for polymer synthesis. However, attaining high selectivity and faradaic efficiency (FE) for cyclohexanone remain challenging, owning to over-hydrogenation of phenol to cyclohexanol and competition of hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Herein, by employing hydrogen spillover effect, we modulate adsorbed hydrogen species (H ) coverage on Pt surface via migration to TiO in an anatase TiO -supported Pt catalyst. In ECH of phenol, a high selectivity (94 %) and good FE (63 %) for cyclohexanone are obtained, showing more advantageous performance compared with previous reports. Cyclic voltammetry (CV) tests and electrochemical Raman spectroscopy reveal that H migrated from Pt to TiO . We propose that TiO -induced hydrogen spillover contributes to low H coverage over Pt, which effectively hinders over-hydrogenation of cyclohexanone and HER. We establish a scaling relationship between the intensity of hydrogen spillover and cyclohexanone selectivity by varying the types of anatase TiO , and show the universality of the strategy over other reducible metal oxides as the support (rutile TiO , CeO and WO ). This work showcases an effective strategy for tuning hydrogenation selectivity in electro-catalysis, by taking advantage of thermo-catalytically well-documented hydrogen spillover effect.
ISSN:1433-7851
1521-3773
1521-3773
DOI:10.1002/anie.202419178