Chinese Journal of Catalysis ›› 2023, Vol. 54: 1-55.DOI: 10.1016/S1872-2067(23)64550-4

• Reviews •     Next Articles

Recent advances in the molecular-level understanding of catalytic hydrogenation and oxidation reactions at metal-aqueous interfaces

Yu Gua,1, Lei Wanga,1, Bo-Qing Xub,*(), Hui Shia,*()   

  1. aSchool of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou 225009, Jiangsu, China
    bInnovative Catalysis Program, Key Lab of Organic Optoelectronics & Molecular Engineering, Department of Chemistry, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
  • Received:2023-06-13 Accepted:2023-10-12 Online:2023-11-18 Published:2023-11-15
  • Contact: *E-mail: bqxu@mail.tsinghua.edu.cn (B.-Q. Xu), shihui@yzu.edu.cn (H. Shi).
  • About author:Bo-Qing Xu is a Changjiang Scholars Professor at the Department of Chemistry, Tsinghua University. His research focuses on the physical chemistry aspects of heterogeneous catalysis in thermochemical and electrochemical reactions, in relation to the sustainable production of energy, chemicals and materials. The ongoing topics of his group include the design and preparation of precious-metal-efficient catalysts and catalytic materials for energy conversion and value-added chemicals from bio-derivative platform molecules, active site speciation, kinetics and mechanism of surface catalysis. He has authored or co-authored 260+ peer-reviewed research articles and 2 book chapters, and holds 23 patents. His name appears in the first recipients of the Catalysis Awards of The Catalysis Society of China. The other awards he received include the Natural Science Award of the Ministry of Education of China and the Scientific Advancement Award from the Association of Chinese Chemical and Petrochemical Industries. He served the catalysis community as a guest editor of Topics in Catalysis (2003), an associate editor of ACS Catalysis (2014-2019) and a vice-president of The Catalysis Society of China (2013-2017). His name was/is included in the editorial/advisory boards of Applied Catalysis A-General, Chinese Journal of Catalysis, Chinese Chemical Letters, Chinese Journal of Fuel Chemistry, Current Catalysis, and Catalysts.
    Hui Shi (Yangzhou University) received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Tsinghua University and earned his Ph.D. degree (Summa Cum Laude) at Technical University of Munich (Germany). He was a postdoctoral research associate at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (USA) during 2013-2017 and a group leader at Prof. Johannes Lercher’s chair during 2017-2020. He has been a full professor at the School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering of Yangzhou University since 2020. His main research interests include the fundamental understanding of acid-base and hydrogenation/oxidation catalysis in zeolites, transition metal sulfides and supported metal catalysts at solid-gas and solid-liquid interfaces. His work combines advanced physicochemical methods and rigorous kinetic and isotopic probes to interrogate the kinetic and mechanistic aspects of catalytic reactions on surfaces and in pores as well as to characterize the structure and electronic state of these enabling materials in stages of preparation as well as during sorption and catalysis. He is currently a member of the International Advisory Board for ChemCatChem (Wiley).
    1Contributed equally to this work.
  • Supported by:
    National Natural Science Foundation of China(22072128);National Natural Science Foundation of China(22308301);National Natural Science Foundation of China(22301267);National Natural Science Foundation of China(21932005)

Abstract:

Solid-aqueous interfaces and their associated phenomena (adsorption, nucleation, corrosion, catalysis, etc.) are ubiquitous in a multitude of chemical systems linking various sub-fields of chemical science. In the realm of heterogeneous catalysis, where an emphasis has been historically placed on chemical transformations at solid-gas interfaces, our molecular understanding of the structures of catalyst-liquid interfaces and the kinetics and mechanisms of the catalytic reactions unfortunately lags behind the development of catalysts and processes in the liquid phase. Heterogeneously catalyzed hydrogenation and oxidation reactions at metal-aqueous interfaces are among the most important processes in the current chemical industry and in a constant pursuit of a greener and more sustainable future, and they also bear significant relevance for the functioning of biological entities. Molecular-level insights into these reactions, however, are often concealed due to the complexity of the dynamic solid-aqueous interfaces. Accordingly, the primary goal of this review is to summarize recent advances in the fundamental understanding of these interfacial chemical processes, particularly spotlighting research in the last decade on dissecting chemical and mechanistic origins of water effects in the catalytic systems. Specifically, we describe a selection of water-engendered effects on the kinetic behaviors and mechanistic consequences for several prototypical metal-catalyzed hydrogenation and oxidation reactions, and critically assess the general and specific roles of water molecules (as solvent or additive) as well as those of the neutral and ionic moieties (particularly H+ and OH-) that are dissolved and solvated in water or equilibrated with the functionalities at the catalyst surfaces. We also show growing evidence that has endorsed close mechanistic connections between thermo- and electrocatalytically enabled redox chemistry at the interfaces, which point to promising strategies of integrating the two historically separated fields. While doing so, systematic approaches combining rigorous reaction tests, kinetic and isotopic probes, advanced characterization techniques and theoretical methods are highlighted. Altogether, the discussed examples underscore the paramount importance of hydrogen-bonding interactions, ionization of covalently bonded surface moieties, heterolytic bond activations and proton-coupled electron transfer as the main factors underlying the uniqueness of water-mediated interfacial redox chemistries and their associated solvation effects.

Key words: Solid-liquid interfaces, Metal-aqueous interfaces, Hydrogen-bonding interactions, Heterolytic bond activations, Proton-coupled electron transfer, Aqueous-phase reactions, Hydrogenation catalysis, Oxidation catalysis