Thermochemical Aerobic Oxidation Catalysis in Water Proceeds via Coupled Electrochemical Half-Reactions
2021
Heterogeneous
aqueous-phase aerobic oxidations are an important emerging class of catalytic
transformations, particularly for upgrading next generation bio-derived
substrates. The mechanism of these reactions and the precise role of O2
in particular remains unclear. Herein, we test the hypothesis that
thermochemical aerobic oxidation proceeds via two coupled electrochemical
half-reactions for oxygen reduction and substrate oxidation. We collect electrochemical and thermochemical data on common
noble metal catalysts under identical reaction/transport environments, and find
that the electrochemical polarization curves of the O2 reduction and
the substrate oxidation half-reaction closely predict the mixed potential of
the catalyst measured in operando
during thermochemical catalysis across 13 diverse variables spanning reaction
conditions, catalyst composition, reactant identity, and pH. Additionally, we find that driving the oxidation
half-reaction reaction electrochemically in the absence of O2 at the
mixed potential leads to very similar rates and selectivities as for the
thermochemical reaction in all cases examined. These findings strongly indicate
that the role of O2 in thermochemical aerobic oxidation is solely as
an electron scavenger that provides an incipient electrochemical driving force
for substrate oxidation. These studies provide a quantitative
and predictive link between thermochemical and electrochemical catalysis,
thereby enabling the rational design of new thermochemical liquid-phase aerobic
oxidation schemes by applying the principles of electrochemistry.
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
49
References
0
Citations
NaN
KQI