Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Building-kit catalyst

05.22.24 | Wiley

CalDigit TS4 Thunderbolt 4 Dock

CalDigit TS4 Thunderbolt 4 Dock simplifies serious desks with 18 ports for high-speed storage, monitors, and instruments across Mac and PC setups.

Use of the greenhouse gas CO 2 as a chemical raw material would not only reduce emissions, but also the consumption of fossil feedstocks. A novel metal-free organic framework could make it possible to electrocatalytically produce ethylene, a primary chemical raw material, from CO 2 . As a team has reported in the journal Angewandte Chemie , nitrogen atoms with a particular electron configuration play a critical role for the catalyst.

Ethylene (ethene, C 2 H 4 ) is an essential starting material for many products, including polyethylene and other plastics. Ethylene is produced industrially by the high-energy cracking and rectification of fossil feedstocks. The electrochemical conversion of CO 2 to ethylene would be a promising route to reducing CO 2 emissions while also saving energy and fossil resources.

CO 2 is very stable, which makes it difficult to induce into reaction. With the use of electricity and catalysts, it is currently possible to convert it into C 1 chemicals such as methanol and methane. The additional challenge in producing ethylene is that a bond must be formed between two carbon atoms. This has previously only been achieved with copper catalysts. Metal-free electrocatalysis would be advantageous because metals are a cost factor and can cause environmental problems.

A team led by Chengtao Gong and Fu-Sheng Ke at Wuhan University, China, has now developed a metal-free electrocatalyst for the conversion of CO 2 to ethylene. The catalyst is based on a nitrogen-containing covalent organic framework (COF). COFs are a new class of porous, crystalline, purely organic materials with defined topology. In contrast to metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), they require no metal ions to hold them together. Their pore sizes and chemical properties can be tuned over a wide range through selection of the building blocks.

The new COF contains nitrogen atoms with a special electron configuration (sp 3 hybridization) as catalytically active centers. These sp 3 nitrogen centers bind the individual building blocks into a framework through an aminal link (two amino groups bound to one carbon atom). In contrast to COFs with a classic imine-linkage (–C=N–), aminal COFs have strict requirements regarding the lengths and angles of the bonds between building blocks, which causes the frameworks to be formed through ring closures. The researchers found a suitable combination by using piperazine (a six-membered ring made of four carbon and two nitrogen atoms) and a building block made of three aromatic, six-membered carbon rings. When used as electrodes, their new COFs demonstrated high selectivity and performance (Faraday efficiency up to 19.1%) for the production of ethylene. Success of the aminal COFs is due to the high density of active sp 3 -nitrogen centers, which both very effectively capture CO 2 and transfer electrons. This results in a high concentration of excited intermediates that can undergo C–C coupling. In contrast, a variety of imine-linked COFs, which contain sp 2 nitrogen instead of sp 3 , were similarly tested and produced no ethylene. This proves the importance of proper electron configuration for the electrochemical reduction of CO 2 to ethylene.

(3294 characters)

Prof. Fu-Sheng Ke is an associate professor at the School of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, Wuhan University, focusing on electrochemical energy storage and conversion.

Angewandte Chemie International Edition

10.1002/anie.202404738

Experimental study

Not applicable

Linkage Engineering in Covalent Organic Frameworks for Metal-Free Electrocatalytic C2H4 Production from CO2

18-Apr-2024

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Mario Mueller
Wiley
mmueller@wiley.com

Source

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Wiley. (2024, May 22). Building-kit catalyst. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/12DX54Y1/building-kit-catalyst.html
MLA:
"Building-kit catalyst." Brightsurf News, May. 22 2024, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/12DX54Y1/building-kit-catalyst.html.