Room-temperature fabrication of defective CoOxHy nanosheets with abundant oxygen vacancies and high porosity as efficient 5-hydroxymethylfurfural oxidation electrocatalysts†
Abstract
Recently, cobalt oxides/hydroxides have attracted increasing attention in the electrocatalytic oxidation reaction of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMFOR) under ambient conditions for 2,5-furandicarboxylic acid (FDCA) production, but understanding of the interplay of defective sites (i.e., oxygen vacancies and porosity) remains lacking. Herein, a series of defective cobalt oxide hydrate (CoOxHy) nanosheets were fabricated via room-temperature reductive treatments with methylamine (MA) and/or NaBH4 (BH). These defective CoOxHy nanosheets possessed abundant oxygen vacancies in relation to high Co2+/Co3+ ratios and high porosity, with a largely maintained ultrathin lamellar framework, and thus exhibited markedly improved catalytic activity and selectivity for HMFOR. DFT calculations also verified the beneficial role of oxygen vacancies towards HMF adsorption and activation, preferentially via the aldehyde group of HMF. In the optimal CoOxHy-MA, 98% FDCA yield and a faradaic efficiency of 83% were achieved within 200 min at a constant potential of 1.52 V vs. RHE. The mesoporosity mainly induced by MA improved the mass transportation of reactants and products, leading to a higher rate of HMFOR. Meanwhile, with the additional in-sheet micropores mainly induced by BH, the selectivity towards the oxidation intermediate 5-formyl-2-furancarboxylic acid (FFCA) significantly increased, probably due to the accelerated penetration of FFCA instead of further oxidation to FDCA. This work highlights the simultaneous regulation of the oxygen vacancies and porosity of metal oxide/hydroxide catalysts by facile reductive treatments for efficient electrochemical biomass conversion.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Advances in Electrosynthesis for a Greener Chemical Industry