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Mechanism of Electrocatalytic H2 Evolution, Carbonyl Hydrogenation, and Carbon-Carbon Coupling on Cu

  • Hongwen Chen
  • , Jayendran Iyer
  • , Yue Liu
  • , Simon Krebs
  • , Fuli Deng
  • , Andreas Jentys
  • , Debra J. Searles
  • , M. Ali Haider
  • , Rachit Khare
  • , Johannes A. Lercher
  • Technical University of Munich
  • Indian Institute of Technology Delhi
  • University of Queensland
  • East China Normal University
  • Indian Institute of Technology Delhi−Abu Dhabi
  • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Aqueous-phase electrocatalytic hydrogenation of benzaldehyde on Cu leads not only to benzyl alcohol (the carbonyl hydrogenation product), but Cu also catalyzes carbon-carbon coupling to hydrobenzoin. In the absence of an organic substrate, H2 evolution proceeds via the Volmer-Tafel mechanism on Cu/C, with the Tafel step being rate-determining. In the presence of benzaldehyde, the catalyst surface is primarily covered with the organic substrate, while H* coverage is low. Mechanistically, the first H addition to the carbonyl O of an adsorbed benzaldehyde molecule leads to a surface-bound hydroxy intermediate. The hydroxy intermediate then undergoes a second and rate-determining H addition to its α-C to form benzyl alcohol. The H additions occur predominantly via the proton-coupled electron transfer mechanism. In a parallel reaction, the radical α-C of the hydroxy intermediate attacks the electrophilic carbonyl C of a physisorbed benzaldehyde molecule to form the C-C bond, which is rate-determining. The C-C coupling is accompanied by the protonation of the formed alkoxy radical intermediate, coupled with electron transfer from the surface of Cu, to form hydrobenzoin.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)13949-13961
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume146
Issue number20
DOIs
StatePublished - 22 May 2024

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