4.8 Article

Nitrate-Mediated Alcohol Oxidation on Cadmium Sulfide Photocatalysts

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 5732-5741

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.9b01051

Keywords

semiconductor photocatalysis; alcohol oxidation; redox mediator; cadmium sulfide; nitrate radical

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Catalysis Science Program [DE-SC0006587]
  2. University of Michigan College of Engineering
  3. NSF [DMR-0420785]
  4. University of Michigan Rackham Graduate School
  5. Rackham Merit Fellowship

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Developing photocatalysts capable of organic oxidations enables the generation of value-added products from biomass feedstocks through visible light irradiation. Through a series of nonaqueous photocatalytic experiments, we have uncovered that CdS nanowires catalyze benzyl alcohol (BnOH) oxidation and 5-hydroxymethylfufural (HMF) oxidation. The rate can be improved by introducing nitrate salts that act as a redox mediator in solution. Specifically, nitrate salts of lithium, magnesium, calcium, and manganese promote the selective photooxidation of BnOH to benzaldehyde on CdS in 70-100% yields at rates up to 13.6 mM h(-1), compared to 8% yield at 3 mM h(-1) in the absence of a nitrate mediator. Kinetic analysis reveals that, in the absence of nitrate salts, the reaction is first-order with respect to BnOH, while in the presence of nitrate, the reaction is half-order in BnOH. This rate law disparity, along with radical trapping and kinetic isotope experiments, suggests that nitrate-mediated alcohol oxidations proceed through a mechanism involving the catalytic generation of a nitrate radical, NO3 center dot. The generation of this radical also enables the selective photooxidation of HMF to 2,5-diformylfuran at a rate of 2.6 mM h(-1) using CdS nanowires.

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