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From Ethylene Glycol to Glycolic Acid: Electrocatalytic Conversion on Pt-Group Metal Surfaces

Yue Liu, Lin Wang, Yang Zhang, Juan Xie, Jiahao Li, Jincheng Wei, Man Zhang, Yao‐Yue Yang

2024Inorganic Chemistry33 citationsDOI

Abstract

Ethylene glycol (EG) is one of the most attractive platform molecules derived from biomass and waste plastics. Thus, the selective electrooxidation of ethylene glycol (EGOR) into value-added chemicals (especially glycolic acid (GA)) can promote its recycling and upgrading. However, the understanding of the EG-to-GA process on Pt-group metal (PGM) electrodes is far limited now. It has been shown that the Pt and Pd electrodes could show considerable EGOR activity but not Rh and Ir electrodes. Meanwhile, EGOR mainly produces the glycolate, oxalate, and formate on Pt and Pd electrodes, whereas it can obtain minute amounts of glycolate and oxalate on Rh and Ir electrodes. Impressively, the selectivity of glycolate on Pt and Pd electrodes can be over 85% (apparent Faradaic efficiency) in alkaline media, although the stability should be further improved through interfacial tuning and/or engineering. This work might deepen the fundamental understanding of the EGOR process on the nature of PGM electrodes.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryGlycolic acidEthylene glycolMetalGroup (periodic table)Polymer chemistryOrganic chemistryGeneticsBacteriaLactic acidBiologyElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures