4.8 Article

Long-Term Stable Hydrogen Production from Water and Lactic Acid via Visible-Light-Driven Photocatalysis in a Porous Microreactor

Journal

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/anie.202307490

Keywords

H-2; H2O; Photocatalysis; Polymer; Reactor

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Long-term stable hydrogen production from water and lactic acid was achieved via visible-light-driven photocatalysis in a porous microreactor (PP12), benefiting from photocatalyst dispersion, charge separation, mass transfer, and dissociation of O-H bonds associated with H2O. The H-2 bubbling production rate in PP12 using Pt/CdS photocatalyst was 602.5 mmol h(-1) m(-2), which is 1000 times higher than that in a traditional reactor. Even when amplified into a 1 m(2) flat-plate reactor and extended to 100 hours, the H-2 bubbling production rate remained at around 600.0 mmol h(-1) m(-2), showing great potential for commercialization.
Photocatalytic hydrogen (H-2) production is significant to overcome challenges like fossil fuel depletion and carbon dioxide emission, but its efficiency is still far below that which is needed for commercialization. Herein, we achieve long-term stable H-2 bubbling production from water (H2O) and lactic acid via visible-light-driven photocatalysis in a porous microreactor (PP12); the catalytic system benefits from photocatalyst dispersion, charge separation, mass transfer, and dissociation of O-H bonds associated with H2O. With the widely used platinum/cadmium-sulfide (Pt/CdS) photocatalyst, PP12 leads to a H-2 bubbling production rate of 602.5 mmol h(-1) m(-2), which is 1000 times higher than that in a traditional reactor. Even when amplifying PP12 into a flat-plate reactor with an area as large as 1 m(2) and extending the reaction time to 100 h, the H-2 bubbling production rate still remains at around 600.0 mmol h(-1) m(-2), offering great potential for commercialization.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available