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Selective Oxidation of Glycerol into Formic Acid by Photogenerated Holes and Superoxide Radicals

ChemSusChem [2022]
Meijiang Liu, Huifang Liu, Ning Li, Chaofeng Zhang, Jian Zhang, Feng Wang
ABSTRACT

Graphical Selectivity under control : The synergistic action of photogenerated holes and superoxide radicals could selectively oxidize the C−C bond breakage to generate formic acid. And the generation of hydroxyl radicals was inhibited in favor of solving the over-oxidation of formic acid. Photocatalysis is a promising technology for conversion of the glycerol into formic acid, but photocatalytic oxidation of C−C bonds in glycerol exhibits poor selectivity towards formic acid because the photogenerated radicals (e.g., hydroxyl radicals) further oxidize formic acid to CO 2 . In this work, a synergy of photogenerated holes and superoxide radicals that achieved the selective oxidation of glycerol into formic acid over the TiO 2 catalyst was revealed. The charge separation of pristine TiO 2 was improved with the aid of oxygen, which resulted in efficient hole oxidation of the C−C bonds in glycerol to formic acid. Surface active species were controlled to prevent being converted to hydroxyl radicals on TiO 2 by controlling the oxygen and water contents, which solved the problem of formic acid peroxidation without sophisticated catalyst modifications. Mechanism studies suggested that glyceraldehyde and glycolaldehyde were the intermediates to generate formic acid. This work provides a green and efficient approach to produce formic acid as a liquid hydrogen carrier from bio-based alcohols.

MATERIALS

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