The
selective oxidation of alcohols has attracted a great deal
of attention. While most photocatalytic studies focus on the generation
of hydrogen from alcohols, there is also a great potential to replace
inefficient thermal reaction pathways (as e.g. the formox process)
by light-driven reactions. In this work we focus on the photoreforming
of methanol, ethanol, cyclohexanol, benzyl alcohol, and tert-butanol on well-defined Pt
x
/TiO2(110) under UHV. It is found that, with the exception of tert-butanol, alcohol oxidation can produce the respective
water-free aldehydes and ketones along with the formation of stoichiometric
molecular hydrogen with 100% selectivity. While α-H-containing
alcohols usually exhibit only a disproportionation reaction with the
release of H2, another reaction pathway is detected for
methanol (and to a much lower extent benzyl alcohol) to yield the
respective ester, methyl formate (or benzyl benzoate, respectively).
The formation of this product occurs via a consecutive photoreaction
and is strongly influenced by temperature. In general, higher temperatures
lead to a higher selectivity toward formaldehyde, as product desorption
is favored over the consecutive photoreaction. For tert-butanol two parallel photoreactions occur. In addition to the splitting
of a C–C bond yielding a methyl radical, hydrogen, and acetone,
dehydration to isobutene is observed. The branching ratios of both
reaction pathways can be strongly controlled by temperature, by changing
the reaction regime from adsorption to desorption limited. The high
selectivities toward aldehydes are attributed to the absence of O2 and water, which inhibits an unwanted overoxidation to acids
or CO/CO2. This study shows that photocatalysis under such
conditions provides a prospective approach for a highly selective
and water-free aldehyde production under mild conditions.
The photocatalytic H2 evolution on co-catalyst loaded titania is interpreted by a new mechanism, in which the co-catalyst acts as a recombination center for hydrogen and not as a reduction site of a photoreaction.
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