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Efficient carbon dioxide hydrogenation to formic acid with buffering ionic liquids.

Andreas WeilhardStephen P ArgentVictor Sans
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
The efficient transformation of CO2 into chemicals and fuels is a key challenge for the decarbonisation of the synthetic production chain. Formic acid (FA) represents the first product of CO2 hydrogenation and can be a precursor of higher added value products or employed as a hydrogen storage vector. Bases are typically required to overcome thermodynamic barriers in the synthesis of FA, generating waste and requiring post-processing of the formate salts. The employment of buffers can overcome these limitations, but their catalytic performance has so far been modest. Here, we present a methodology utilising IL as buffers to catalytically transform CO2 into FA with very high efficiency and comparable performance to the base-assisted systems. The combination of multifunctional basic ionic liquids and catalyst design enables the synthesis of FA with very high catalytic efficiency in TONs of >8*105 and TOFs > 2.1*104 h-1.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • carbon dioxide
  • high efficiency
  • room temperature
  • drug delivery
  • crystal structure
  • cancer therapy
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  • metal organic framework