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1.
Glob Chall ; 8(6): 2300185, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38868607

ABSTRACT

Green hydrogen is the key to the chemical industry achieving net zero emissions. The chemical industry is responsible for almost 2% of all CO2 emissions, with half of it coming from the production of simple commodity chemicals, such as NH3, H2O2, methanol, and aniline. Despite electrolysis driven by renewable power sources emerging as the most promising way to supply all the green hydrogen required in the production chain of these chemicals, in this review, it is worth noting that the photocatalytic route may be underestimated and can hold a bright future for this topic. In fact, the production of H2 by photocatalysis still faces important challenges in terms of activity, engineering, and economic feasibility. However, photocatalytic systems can be tailored to directly convert sunlight and water (or other renewable proton sources) directly into chemicals, enabling a solar-to-chemical strategy. Here, a series of recent examples are presented, demonstrating that photocatalysis can be successfully employed to produce the most important commodity chemicals, especially on NH3, H2O2, and chemicals produced by reduction reactions. The replacement of fossil-derived H2 in the synthesis of these chemicals can be disruptive, essentially safeguarding the transition of the chemical industry to a low-carbon economy.

2.
Adv Mater ; 35(52): e2304152, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37986204

ABSTRACT

Single-atom catalysis is a field of paramount importance in contemporary science due to its exceptional ability to combine the domains of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis. Iron and manganese metalloenzymes are known to be effective in C─H oxidation reactions in nature, inspiring scientists to mimic their active sites in artificial catalytic systems. Herein, a simple and versatile cation exchange method is successfully employed to stabilize low-cost iron and manganese single-atoms in poly(heptazine imides) (PHI). The resulting materials are employed as photocatalysts for toluene oxidation, demonstrating remarkable selectivity toward benzaldehyde. The protocol is then extended to the selective oxidation of different substrates, including (substituted) alkylaromatics, benzyl alcohols, and sulfides. Detailed mechanistic investigations revealed that iron- and manganese-containing photocatalysts work through a similar mechanism via the formation of high-valent M═O species. Operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) is employed to confirm the formation of high-valent iron- and manganese-oxo species, typically found in metalloenzymes involved in highly selective C─H oxidations.

3.
Chem Soc Rev ; 52(15): 4878-4932, 2023 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37409655

ABSTRACT

Recently, the missing link between homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis has been found and it was named single-atom catalysis (SAC). However, the SAC field still faces important challenges, one of which is controlling the bonding/coordination between the single atoms and the support in order to compensate for the increase in surface energy when the particle size is reduced due to atomic dispersion. Excellent candidates to meet this requirement are carbon nitride (CN)-based materials. Metal atoms can be firmly trapped in nitrogen-rich coordination sites in CN materials, which makes them a unique class of hosts for preparing single-atom catalysts (SACs). As one of the most promising two-dimensional supports to stabilize isolated metal atoms, CN materials have been increasingly employed for preparing SACs. Herein, we will cover the most recent advances in single-atoms supported by CN materials. In this review, the most important characterization techniques and the challenges faced in this topic will be discussed, and the commonly employed synthetic methods will be delineated for different CN materials. Finally, the catalytic performance of SACs based on carbon nitrides will be reviewed with a special focus on their photocatalytic applications. In particular, we will prove CN as a non-innocent support. The relationship between single-atoms and carbon nitride supports is two-way, where the single-atoms can change the electronic properties of the CN support, while the electronic features of the CN matrix can tune the catalytic activity of the single sites in photocatalytic reactions. Finally, we highlight the frontiers in the field, including analytical method development, truly controlled synthetic methods, allowing the fine control of loading and multi-element synthesis, and how understanding the two-way exchange behind single-atoms and CN supports can push this topic to the next level.

4.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36315872

ABSTRACT

Photocatalysis provides a sustainable pathway to produce the consumer chemical H2O2 from atmospheric O2 via an oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Such an alternative is attractive to replace the cumbersome traditional anthraquinone method for H2O2 synthesis on a large scale. Carbon nitrides have shown very interesting results as heterogeneous photocatalysts in ORR because their covalent two-dimensional (2D) structure is believed to increase selectivity toward the two-electron process. However, an efficient and scalable application of carbon nitrides for this reaction is far from being achieved. Poly(heptazine imides) (PHIs) are a more powerful subgroup of carbon nitrides whose structure provides high crystallinity and a scaffold to host transition-metal single atoms. Herein, we show that PHIs functionalized with sodium and the recently reported fully protonated PHI exhibit high activity in two-electron ORR under visible light. The latter converted O2 to up to 1556 mmol L-1 h-1 g-1 H2O2 under 410 nm irradiation using inexpensive but otherwise chemically demanding glycerin as a sacrificial electron donor. We also prove that functionalization with transition metals is not beneficial for H2O2 synthesis, as the metal also catalyzes its decomposition. Transient photoluminescence spectroscopy suggests that H-PHIs exhibit higher activity due to their longer excited-state lifetime. Overall, this work highlights the high photocatalytic activity of the rarely examined fully protonated PHI and represents a step forward in the application of inexpensive covalent materials for photocatalytic H2O2 synthesis.

5.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(53): 7419-7422, 2022 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35695323

ABSTRACT

Here we report a photocatalytic system based on crystalline carbon nitrides (PHI) and highly dispersed transition metals (Fe, Co and Cu) for controlled methane photooxidation to methanol under mild conditions. The Cu-PHI catalyst showed a remarkable methanol production (2900 µmol g-1) in 4 hours, with a turnover number of 51 moles of oxygenated liquid product per mole of Cu. To date, this result is the highest value for methane oxidation under mild conditions (1 bar, 25 °C).

6.
Faraday Discuss ; 227: 306-320, 2021 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33305778

ABSTRACT

Herein we demonstrate that adding single atoms of selected transition metals to graphitic carbon nitrides allows the tailoring of the electronic and chemical properties of these 2D nanomaterials, directly impacting their usage in photocatalysis. These single-atom photocatalysts were successfully prepared with Ni2+, Pt2+ or Ru3+ by cation exchange, using poly(heptazine imides) (PHI) as the 2D layered platform. Differences in photocatalytic performance for these metals were assessed using rhodamine-B (RhB) and methyl orange (MO) as model compounds for degradation. We have demonstrated that single atoms may either improve or impair the degradation of RhB and MO, depending on the proper matching of the net charge of these molecules and the surface potential of the catalyst, which in turn is responsive to the metal incorporated into the PHI nanostructures. Computer simulations demonstrated that even one transition metal cation caused dramatic changes in the electronic structure of PHI, especially regarding light absorption, which was extended all along the visible up to the near IR region. Besides introducing new quantum states, the metal atoms strongly polarized the molecular orbitals across the PHI and electrostatic fields arising from the electronic transitions became at least tenfold stronger. This simple proof of concept demonstrates that these new materials hold promise as tools for many important photocatalytic reactions that are strongly dependent on our ability to control surface charge and its polarization under illumination, such as H2 evolution, CO2 reduction and photooxidation in general.

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