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Peroxodicarbonate – a renaissance of an electrochemically generated green oxidizer

Theresa Rücker, Niclas Schupp, Fiona Sprang, Tomas Horsten, Bernd Wittgens, Siegfried R. Waldvogel

2024Chemical Communications13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The direct anodic conversion of alkali carbonates in aqueous media provides access to peroxodicarbonate, which is a safe to use and green oxidizer. Although first reports date back around 150 years, its low concentrations and limited thermal stability have consigned this reagent to oblivion. Boron-doped diamond anodes, novel electrolyser concepts for heat dissipation, and the mixed cation trick allow record breaking peroxodicarbonate concentrations >900 mM. The electrochemical generation of peroxodicarbonate was already demonstrated on a pilot scale. The inherent safety is ensured by the limited stability of the peroxodicarbonate solution, which decomposes under ambient conditions to oxygen and facilitates subsequent downstream processing. This peroxide has, in particular at higher concentrations, an unusual reactivity and seems to be an ideal reagent when peroxo-equivalents in combination with alkaline base are required. The conversions with peroxodicarbonate include the Dakin reaction, epoxidation, oxidation of amines (aliphatic and aromatic) and sulfur compounds, deborolative hydroxylation reactions, and many more. Since the base equivalents also represent the makeup chemical for pulping plants, peroxodicarbonate is an ideal reagent for the selective degradation of lignin to vanillin. Moreover, peroxodicarbonate can be used as a halogen-free bleaching agent. The emerging electrogeneration and use of this green platform oxidizer are surveyed for the first time.

Topics & Concepts

Alkali metalAqueous mediumAnodeThe RenaissanceAqueous solutionChemistryMaterials scienceInorganic chemistryChemical engineeringOrganic chemistryElectrodeArtPhysical chemistryEngineeringArt historyChemical Synthesis and ReactionsPolyoxometalates: Synthesis and ApplicationsChemistry and Chemical Engineering
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