Photoelectrochemical Conversion of Methane to Ethane and Hydrogen under Visible Light Using Functionalized Tungsten Trioxide Photoanodes with Proton Exchange Membrane.
Fumiaki AmanoSouta SuzukiKeisuke TsushiroJunji ItoTetsuro NaitoHiroshi KubotaPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
Developing methane utilization technologies is desired to convert abundant and renewable carbon resources, such as natural gas and biogas, into value-added chemical products. This study provides insights into emerging photoelectrochemical (PEC) technology for the photocatalytic transformation of methane to C 2 H 6 and H 2 using visible light at room temperature. The PEC conversion of methane to oxygenates has been investigated in aqueous electrolytes. Herein, we demonstrate the gas-phase PEC methane conversion using a proton exchange membrane (PEM) as a solid polymer electrolyte and a gas-diffusion photoanode for methane oxidation. Tungsten trioxide (WO 3 ), a semiconductor photocatalyst responsive to visible light, is utilized as the photoanode material. Ultraviolet light (∼365 nm) excitation predominantly results in CO 2 production with lower C 2 H 6 selectivity in humidified methane. In contrast, visible light (∼453 nm) effectively promotes C 2 H 6 production over the WO 3 photoanode, attributed to preferential hydroxyl radical ( • OH) formation compared to UV irradiation. Photogenerated holes formed near the valence band maximum of WO 3 contribute to • OH formation through a single-electron water oxidation. The photogenerated • OH activates gaseous methane molecules to methyl radicals, subsequently coupled into C 2 H 6 at the gas-electrolyte-semiconductor boundary. H 2 is concurrently formed on the cathode electrocatalyst. Improving the selectivity for the dehydrogenative coupling of methane is pivotal for enhancing the energy efficiency in the PEM-PEC system.