Next Energy (Sep 2023)

Carbohydrates generated via hot water as catalyst for CO2 reduction reaction

  • Yang Yang,
  • Heng Zhong,
  • Jiong Cheng,
  • Yun Hang Hu,
  • Richard Lee Smith, Jr,
  • Fangming Jin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 3
p. 100037

Abstract

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Combining terrestrial biomass with submarine-type hydrothermal environments for CO2 reduction is a possible approach for realizing new energies while achieving sustainable circulation of carbon. Herein, carbohydrate-enabled CO2 reduction based on NaHCO3 conversion to formate revealed that hydrothermal environments facilitated direct hydrogen transfer from carbohydrates (glucose, cellulose) to CO2/NaHCO3 with hot water (250–300 °C, 5–20 MPa) acting as homogeneous catalyst in absence of any conventional catalysts giving CO2/NaHCO3 reduction efficiencies as high as 76% for cellulose. Time-resolved operando hydrothermal DRIFTS spectra of glycolaldehyde in hot water (250 °C, autogenous pressure) verified that water catalyzed NaHCO3 reduction by converting the -CHO group in the carbohydrate to its hydrated state as -CH(OH)2, which enabled NaHCO3 reduction by direct hydrogen transfer and that the ratio of hydrogen transfer from water:glycolaldehyde for NaHCO3 reduction was about 13:87 on an atom basis. For cellulose exploited as energy input, a greater than 3.4% solar-to-formate efficiency can be theoretically attained, which is unprecedented compared with present literature values. These findings provide basic data for future studies on biomass-enabled CO2 reduction and broaden the scope of hydrothermal chemistry for developing net-zero emission processes.

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