In a study published in Science on September 4, a research team led by Prof. WANG Feng from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with Prof. Paolo Fornasiero from the University of Trieste in Italy, has developed a photochemical strategy for heterolytic hydrogen (H 2 ) dissociation at ambient temperature, a long-standing challenge in H 2 activation chemistry.
Hydrogenation is one of the most fundamental reactions in the chemical industry. It is estimated that 25% of all chemical processes include at least one hydrogenation step. An essential procedure of hydrogenation is H 2 dissociation. It occurs through two pathways: homolytic and heterolytic dissociation.
Heterolytic H 2 dissociation stands out for producing many fine chemicals since it generates reactive, polar H 2 species that can selectively reduce polar functional groups. However, it typically operates at high temperatures and pressures, leading to high energy consumption and safety concerns.
In this study, the researchers developed a light-induced strategy to realize heterolytic H 2 dissociation. Using gold-loaded titanium dioxide (Au/TiO 2 ) as a model photocatalyst, the researchers showed that upon Ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, electrons migrated from TiO 2 to gold (Au) nanoparticles, and holes were captured at the interfacial defects constituted by Au–O–Ti scaffolds. This spatial proximity of electrons on Au and holes at interfacial defects formed electron-hole pairs that drove the heterolytic H 2 dissociation. The activity of the heterolytic H 2 dissociation scaled almost linearly with light intensity, confirming the photocatalytic nature of H 2 dissociation process.
Furthermore, the researchers demonstrated the advantages of this strategy. They reduced the inert carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), and showed that the dissociated H 2 species almost fully reduced CO 2 into ethane at ambient temperature. Furthermore, cascading with a subsequent photocatalytic ethane dehydrogenation generated ethylene with >99% yield over 1,500 h of UV irradiation.
The light-induced H 2 dissociation is universal and can be extended to visible-light responsive photocatalysts, such as Au/N-doped TiO 2 , Au/CeO 2 , and Au/BiVO 4 . A demonstration utilizing solar energy to convert CO 2 achieved an ethane selectivity of up to 90%.
"This work offers a promising route to produce high-value chemicals like ethane and ethylene from H 2 and CO 2 under ambient conditions, which could lower the energy cost and reduce carbon emissions," said Prof. WANG. "In the future, we hope the strategy develops into a scalable, sunlight-driven or photothermal coupled technique to upgrade modern coal-based chemical industries."
Science
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Photochemical H2 dissociation for nearly quantitative CO2 reduction to ethylene
4-Aug-2025