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Efficient Photocatalytic CH<sub>4</sub>‐to‐Ethanol Conversion by Limiting Interfacial Hydroxyl Radicals Using Gold Nanoparticles

Quan Zhang, Chao Yang, Yangshen Chen, Yaqin Yan, Miao Kan, Huining Wang, Ximeng Lv, Qing Han, Gengfeng Zheng

2024Angewandte Chemie International Edition16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Photocatalytic CH 4 oxidation to ethanol with high selectivity is attractive but substantially challenging. The activation of inert C−H bonds at ambient conditions requires highly reactive oxygen species like hydroxyl radicals (⋅OH), while the presence of those oxidative species also facilitates fast formation of C 1 products, instead of the kinetically sluggish C−C coupling to produce ethanol. Herein, we developed a BiVO 4 photocatalyst with surface functionalization of Au nanoparticles (BiVO 4 @Au), which not only enables photogeneration of ⋅OH to activate CH 4 into ⋅CH 3 , but also in situ consumes those ⋅OH species to retard their further attack on ⋅CH 3 , resulting in an enhanced ⋅CH 3 /⋅OH ratio and facilitating C−C coupling toward ethanol. The ⋅CH 3 /⋅OH ratio is further improved by transporting CH 4 via a gas‐diffusion layer to the photocatalytic interface, leading to even higher ethanol selectivity and production rates. At ambient conditions and without photosensitizers or sacrificial agents, the BiVO 4 @Au photocatalyst exhibited an outstanding CH 4 ‐to‐ethanol conversion performance, including a peak ethanol yield of 680 μmol ⋅ g −1 ⋅ h −1 , a high selectivity of 86 %, and a stable photoconversion of &gt;100 h, substantially exceeding most of the previous reports. Our work suggests an attractive approach of in situ generation and modulation of the ⋅OH levels for photocatalytic CH 4 conversion toward multi‐carbon products.

Topics & Concepts

RadicalPhotocatalysisLimitingEthanolNanoparticleColloidal goldPhotochemistryChemistryChemical engineeringMaterials scienceCatalysisNanotechnologyOrganic chemistryEngineeringMechanical engineeringAdvanced Photocatalysis TechniquesNanomaterials for catalytic reactionsCatalytic Processes in Materials Science