The electrocatalyzed oxidation of glycerol in alkaline solution is
compared with the oxidations of ethylene
glycol and methanol. An analysis of behaviors caused by
instabilities provides strong evidence that the
elementary reactions that dominate the oxidation of glycerol are the
same as those that dominate the oxidation
of methanol. These reactions include the formation of surface
bonded CO and its reaction with surface
bonded hydroxyl radicals. The reactions that precede the dominant
reactions in the oxidation of glycerol are
relatively fast and must involve cleavage of C−C bonds. Evidence
from phase diagrams indicates that the
most probable sequence for the fast reactions requires a sufficient
number of neighboring vacant sites to
produce three surface-bonded CO complexes for each glycerol molecule.
Reaction sequences that lead to
zero, one, or two CO complexes occur with small
probability.
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