The catalytic sites of acidic zeolite
are profoundly altered by
the presence of water changing the nature of the Brønsted acid
site. High-resolution solid-state NMR spectroscopy shows water interacting
with zeolite Brønsted acid sites, converting them to hydrated
hydronium ions over a wide range of temperature and thermodynamic
activity of water. A signal at 9 ppm was observed at loadings of 2–9
water molecules per Brønsted acid site and is assigned to hydrated
hydronium ions on the basis of the evolution of the signal with increasing
water content, chemical shift calculations, and the direct comparison
with HClO4 in water. The intensity of 1H–29Si cross-polarization signal first increased and then decreased
with increasing water chemical potential. This indicates that hydrogen
bonds between water molecules and the tetrahedrally coordinated aluminum
in the zeolite lattice weaken with the formation of hydronium ion–water
clusters and increase the mobility of protons. DFT-based ab
initio molecular dynamics studies at multiple temperatures
and water concentrations agree well with this interpretation. Above
140 °C, however, fast proton exchange between bridging hydroxyl
groups and water occurs even in the presence of only one water molecule
per acid site.
Sustainable energy generation calls
for a shift away from centralized,
high-temperature, energy-intensive processes to decentralized, low-temperature
conversions that can be powered by electricity produced from renewable
sources. Electrocatalytic conversion of biomass-derived feedstocks
would allow carbon recycling of distributed, energy-poor resources
in the absence of sinks and sources of high-grade heat. Selective,
efficient electrocatalysts that operate at low temperatures are needed
for electrocatalytic hydrogenation (ECH) to upgrade the feedstocks.
For effective generation of energy-dense chemicals and fuels, two
design criteria must be met: (i) a high H:C ratio via ECH to allow
for high-quality fuels and blends and (ii) a lower O:C ratio in the
target molecules via electrochemical decarboxylation/deoxygenation
to improve the stability of fuels and chemicals. The goal of this
review is to determine whether the following questions have been sufficiently
answered in the open literature, and if not, what additional information
is required:
What organic functionalities are accessible
for electrocatalytic hydrogenation under a set of reaction conditions?
How do substitutions and functionalities impact the activity and selectivity
of ECH?
What material
properties cause an
electrocatalyst to be active for ECH? Can general trends in ECH be
formulated based on the type of electrocatalyst?
What are the impacts of reaction conditions
(electrolyte concentration, pH, operating potential) and reactor types?
Electrocatalytic
hydrogenation is increasingly studied as an alternative
to integrate the use of recycled carbon feedstocks with renewable
energy sources. However, the abundant empiric observations available
have not been correlated with fundamental properties of substrates
and catalysts. In this study, we investigated electrocatalytic hydrogenation
of a homologues series of carboxylic acids, ketones, phenolics, and
aldehydes on a variety of metals (Pd, Rh, Ru, Cu, Ni, Zn, and Co).
We found that the rates of carbonyl reduction in aldehydes correlate
with the corresponding binding energies between the aldehydes and
the metals according to the Sabatier principle. That is, the highest
rates are obtained at intermediate binding energies. The rates of
H2 evolution that occur in parallel to hydrogenation also
correlate with the H-metal binding energies, following the same volcano-type
behavior. Within the boundaries of this model (e.g., compounds reactive
at room temperature and without important steric effects over the
carbonyl group), the reported correlations help to explain the complex
trends derived from the experimental observations, allowing for the
correlation of rates with binding energies and the differentiation
of mechanistic routes.
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