2016
DOI: 10.1002/chem.201603407
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Carbon Dioxide to Methanol: The Aqueous Catalytic Way at Room Temperature

Abstract: Carbon dioxide may constitute a source of chemicals and fuels if efficient and renewable processes are developed that directly utilize it as feedstock. Two of its reduction products are formic acid and methanol, which have also been proposed as liquid organic chemical carriers in sustainable hydrogen storage. Here we report that both the hydrogenation of carbon dioxide to formic acid and the disproportionation of formic acid into methanol can be realized at ambient temperature and in aqueous, acidic solution, … Show more

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Cited by 96 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
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“…[2,11] This is reasonable because the H 2 / CO 2 pressure suppresses the excess FA dehydrogenation (Scheme 2) and promotes the FA hydrogenation to produce MeOH (Scheme 3). [2,11] This is reasonable because the H 2 / CO 2 pressure suppresses the excess FA dehydrogenation (Scheme 2) and promotes the FA hydrogenation to produce MeOH (Scheme 3).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…[2,11] This is reasonable because the H 2 / CO 2 pressure suppresses the excess FA dehydrogenation (Scheme 2) and promotes the FA hydrogenation to produce MeOH (Scheme 3). [2,11] This is reasonable because the H 2 / CO 2 pressure suppresses the excess FA dehydrogenation (Scheme 2) and promotes the FA hydrogenation to produce MeOH (Scheme 3).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…[2] However, there were problems in improving the catalysis for hydrogenation of CO 2 to FA and subsequent hydrogenation of FA to MeOH. [2] However, there were problems in improving the catalysis for hydrogenation of CO 2 to FA and subsequent hydrogenation of FA to MeOH.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Sordakis et al. have reported a convenient catalytic pathway over a homogeneous iridium catalyst in which CO 2 can be directly reduced to formic acid (FA) under 20 bar pressure of CO 2 and 60 bar pressure of H 2 . Later FA can be selectively converted in the presence of H 2 SO 4 into methanol by a disproportionation in high yield.…”
Section: Co2 Fixation Reactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both of these approaches, indirect and direct conversion, require high temperatures (>130 °C) to obtain MeOH at a reasonable rate. One exception to the requirement of high temperature comes from Himeda and Laurenczy, who showed that direct hydrogenation of CO 2 to MeOH could be achieved at ambient temperature using [Cp*Ir(dhbp)(H 2 O)] 2+ (dhbp=4,4′‐dihydroxy‐2,2′‐bipyridine) as the catalyst in 2 M aqueous H 2 SO 4 (pH≈0) . The acidic conditions were critical for MeOH production, as the same Ir catalyst only produces formic acid at pH 3 …”
Section: Products Of Co2 Hydrogenationmentioning
confidence: 99%