Litcius/Paper detail

Ionic Liquids Promoted Transformation of Carbon Dioxide

Yusi Wang, Yiding Wang, Yanfei Zhao, Jiaju Fu, Zhimin Liu

2025Chemical Reviews52 citationsDOI

Abstract

The unique physicochemical properties of ionic liquids (ILs) make them be widely applied in many areas. Especially, in chemical reaction processes ILs are capable of serving as solvents, catalysts, additives, electrolytes, and display high performances. In the past few decades, the carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emission issue has caused worldwide attention, and various strategies has been developed to solve the problems caused by CO 2 emission. As an accessible, renewable, and environmentally friendly C1 feedstock, CO 2 has been intensively investigated for synthesis of value-added chemicals, fuels, and materials via thermocatalysis, electrocatalysis, and photocatalysis. As a kind of efficient catalysts or promoters, various ILs have been employed in the chemical transformation of CO 2 . Especially, the CO 2 -reactive ILs can chemically capture and activate CO 2, and further catalyze the CO 2 transformation under metal-free and mild conditions, which provide novel protocols to produce value-added chemicals. The catalytic systems comprising IL and metal catalysts combine the advantages of ILs and metal catalysts, and can achieve the reductive transformation of CO 2 coupled with hydrogenation, providing green routes to access fuel and chemicals. Besides, the IL-based electrolytes have been applied in electrocatalytic reduction of CO 2, which cooperate with electrodes to achieve electrocatalytic transformation of CO 2 into different products. In this review article various CO 2 -reactive ILs are first introduced focusing on activation mechanism of CO 2 . Then, the IL-catalyzed CO 2 transformation under metal-free conditions, reductive transformation of CO 2 over IL-metal catalytic systems, and electrocatalytic transformation of CO 2 in IL-based electrolytes are summarized concentrating on the roles of ILs in chemical reactions. The final section extends the scope of this review to prospects and challenges in IL-catalyzed or promoted CO 2 transformation.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryCarbon dioxideIonic liquidIonic bondingTransformation (genetics)Environmental chemistryChemical engineeringInorganic chemistryOrganic chemistryIonCatalysisBiochemistryGeneEngineeringCarbon dioxide utilization in catalysisCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsIonic liquids properties and applications