화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.134, No.21, 8926-8933, 2012
Efficient Subnanometric Gold-Catalyzed Hydrogen Generation via Formic Acid Decomposition under Ambient Conditions
Formic acid (FA) has tremendous potential as a safe and convenient source of hydrogen for sustainable chemical synthesis and renewable energy storage, but controlled and efficient dehydrogenation of FA by a robust solid catalyst under ambient conditions constitutes a major challenge. Here, we report that a previously unappreciated combination of subnanometric gold and an acid-tolerant oxide support facilitates the liberation of CO-free H-2 from FA. Applying an ultradispersed gold catalyst comprising TEM-invisible gold subnanoclusters deposited on zirconia to a FA-amine mixture affords turnover frequencies (TOFs) up to 1590 per hour and a turnover number of more than 118 400 at 50 degrees C. The reaction was accelerated at higher temperatures, but even at room temperature, a significant H-2 evolution (TOFs up to 252 h(-1) after 20 min) can still be obtained. Preliminary mechanistic studies suggest that the reaction is unimolecular in nature and proceeds via a unique amine-assisted formate decomposition mechanism on Au-ZrO2 interface.