Nanoparticle-enabled integration of air capture and conversion of CO
Integrating air capture and conversion of CO 2 is key to realizing energy sustainability. However, current integration approaches require high temperature and pressure, making them energy intensive. Here, we demonstrate a nanoparticle (NP) catalysis approach for the hydrogenation of alkyl carbonate,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nanoscale 2024-10, Vol.16 (39), p.1862-18628 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Integrating air capture and conversion of CO
2
is key to realizing energy sustainability. However, current integration approaches require high temperature and pressure, making them energy intensive. Here, we demonstrate a nanoparticle (NP) catalysis approach for the hydrogenation of alkyl carbonate, an intermediate obtained from the CO
2
capture process, to formate, achieving one-pot air capture and conversion of CO
2
under ambient conditions. The capture is realized in an ethylene glycol (EG) solution of KOH (EG-KOH) at room temperature, where CO
2
is selectively converted into HO-CH
2
CH
2
-O-COOK (∼100% conversion). This carbonate is then hydrogenated using ammonia borane (under ambient pressure and at 50 °C) to formate (HCOOK) (>90% yield) in the presence of a stable Pd NP catalyst with EG being regenerated. Atomistic simulations suggest that the CO
2
absorption process in the EG-KOH solution is energetically stable, and the catalyst surface provides the reaction site to break the C-O bond in the -O-COOK structure, enabling the hydrogenation of the alkyl carbonate to formate and the regeneration of EG. Our study provides a promising NP-catalysis approach for air capture and conversion of CO
2
into value-added chemicals/fuels under ambient conditions.
This work demonstrates a nanoparticle-enabled integration of air capture and conversion of CO
2
. Ambient CO
2
is captured in a KOH-ethylene glycol solution and then selectively reduced to formate under 50 °C and ambient pressure using Pd NPs. |
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ISSN: | 2040-3364 2040-3372 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d4nr02925a |