Non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma–liquid synthesis of organic acids in aqueous solution from carbon monoxide

Abstract

This work aims at understanding the conversion of CO to organic acids, namely oxalic acid and formic acid, using non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma over aqueous solutions. CO exhibited significantly higher conversion to organic acids (more than 15×) compared to CO2 under the same reaction conditions. The result bolsters a proposed two-step process for CO2 fixation, whereby CO2 is first converted to CO, and then CO is converted to organic acids. The organic acids produced from CO are intermediates in the water–gas shift (WGS) reaction of CO in the presence of an aqueous solution to dissolved CO2 and hydrogen gas. Based on a simple thermodynamic analysis, the organic acid yield was increased by lowering the plasma–liquid reaction temperature using an ice bath to cool the reaction flask. The composition of the organic acids could be varied by changing the pH of the solution. Oxalate was formed in higher concentrations with increasing solution pH above the pKa of the radical species (CO2. Below the pKa value, formate was the exclusive organic acid formed. The production of formate has a rather weak pH dependence but is enhanced slightly at a basic pH above 10. Furthermore, at basic pH, the effect of electrolyte concentration comes into play. Higher electrolyte concentrations, leading to shorter electrolyte Debye lengths, resulted in lowered organic acid yields. The highest yields of organic acids obtained in our system were 122 mg L−1 for oxalate and 77 mg L−1 for formate at an optimum 1 mM NaOH concentration in the starting solution. This work is a successful pioneering example of CO to organic acids conversion using non-thermal plasmas, which opens the pathway for a promising two-step conversion process of CO2 to organic acids.

Graphical abstract: Non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma–liquid synthesis of organic acids in aqueous solution from carbon monoxide

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Apr 2025
Accepted
28 Jul 2025
First published
05 Aug 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Green Chem., 2025, Advance Article

Non-thermal atmospheric pressure plasma–liquid synthesis of organic acids in aqueous solution from carbon monoxide

A. J. Sudagar, P. Drebes and E. Thimsen, Green Chem., 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5GC02035B

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