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CARBON WORLDS
Carbon dioxide as a raw material
by Staff Writers
Bochum, Germany (SPX) Apr 18, 2018

illustration only

Researchers at the Ruhr-Universitat Bochum have found a way to turn climate-damaging CO2 into an alcohol that could serve as a raw material for the chemical industry - without producing large amounts of salt waste that usually arise.

The reaction mechanism is described by the team around Timo Wendling and Prof Dr Lukas Goossen together with a colleague of the Technical University of Kaiserslautern in the journal Chemistry - A European Journal.

Converting carbon dioxide into an alcohol without causing unwanted waste products requires a two-step reaction. The problem: For energy reasons, the two partial reactions are virtually impossible to reconcile. In order to make the processes compatible from a thermodynamic point of view, suitable catalysts are needed to facilitate the partial reactions.

The team tested numerous substances and finally found two catalysts that had the required properties: a copper compound for the first reaction step and a rhodium/molybdenum compound for the second step. The exact composition and quantity of solvent in which the reaction took place was also crucial.

This is how the reaction works. "In the first partial reaction, called carboxylation, the researchers coupled CO2 to a hydrocarbon compound. For this purpose, a proton (H+) is released from the hydrocarbon compound; the CO2 molecule docks at the vacant site, which results in an acid. The excess proton is taken up by a base. In the second step, called hydrogenation, the acid is converted to an alcohol through a transfer of protons. The base releases the previously taken proton and is thus recycled.

The team demonstrated the feasibility of this reaction with the hydrocarbon compound phenylacetylene. Further studies must show whether the principle can also be extended to other organic compounds.

With this catalyst system, the researchers achieved a recycling rate of 40 percent for the base.

"This shows that the base is not destroyed during the reaction, but that the process must still be significantly improved to become usable on an industrial scale," says Lukas Goossen, a member of the Excellence Cluster Ruhr Explores Solvation, Resolv in short.

"We have taken a first important step towards harnessing CO2 for the chemical industry, which would be a great economic and environmental advantage."

Research paper


Related Links
Ruhr-University Bochum
Carbon Worlds - where graphite, diamond, amorphous, fullerenes meet


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CARBON WORLDS
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An unconventional melange of algae, eucalyptus and bioenergy with carbon capture and storage appears to be a quirky ecological recipe. But, scientists from Cornell University, Duke University, and the University of Hawaii at Hilo have an idea that could use that recipe to help power and provide food protein to large regions of the world - and simultaneously remove carbon dioxide from Earth's atmosphere. "Algae may be the key to unlocking an important negative-emissions technology to combat climate ... read more

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