Open Access Article
Meheryar R.
Kasad
ab,
James E.
Jackson
c and
Christopher M.
Saffron
*ab
aDepartment of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA
bDepartment of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA. E-mail: saffronc@msu.edu
cDepartment of Chemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA
First published on 19th August 2024
Electrocatalytic hydrogenation (ECH) was explored as a mild technique (≤50 °C under atmospheric pressure) to produce valuable products from furfural, a promising biomass-derived platform chemical. In situ hydrogen equivalents made by water splitting were used to reduce the formyl group and saturate the heteroaromatic ring of furfural on an activated carbon cloth-supported ruthenium electrocatalyst. A systematic study was conducted to understand the relationship between the reaction conditions and the products. The factors analyzed include catholyte solution organic co-solvent content, catholyte solution acid content, and temperature. Acidity of the catholyte solution had the most significant effect on the yield of tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol (THFA). The highest THFA yield was obtained in mildly acidic catholyte solutions (0.02 M HCl and 0.002 M HCl–0.02 M NaCl). The low carbon mole balance closure in the experiments was attributed to the side reactions of the reactants, intermediates, and products. The effects of current density on faradaic efficiency and of the functional groups attached to the furan ring on the formation of saturated heterocyclic products were also explored.
Sustainability spotlightProduction of carbon-based chemicals from agricultural residues provides a pathway for displacing fossil-derived products. In this context, the use of electrochemistry for achieving the required chemical transformations offers potential advantages such as operation at mild conditions, in situ production of reducing/oxidizing equivalents by harnessing renewable electricity, and amenability towards small-scale, localized applications. The present study investigated the electrocatalytic conversion of furfural that is commercially derived from pentosans in agricultural wastes such as corn cobs, to tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol, a specialty solvent and intermediate, using a carbon-supported ruthenium electrocatalyst in a one-pot reactor. Importantly, this approach avoids utilization of hydrogen gas, derived from fossil resources in today's markets, and can be extended to saturation of heteroaromatic rings in several furanic compounds. Thus, the present study seeks to advance utilization of agricultural residues and electrification of processes within the chemical industry conforming with UN SDGs 9 (industry, innovation, and infrastructure) and 12 (responsible consumption and production). |
Hydrogenation is used to produce a range of useful (tetrahydro)furanic products from furfural including furfuryl alcohol (FA), tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol (THFA), 2-methylfuran (2-MF) and 2-methyltetrahydrofuran (2-MTHF). Among these, FA, THFA and 2-MTHF have been identified as furfural derivatives having considerable market size (>50 kton per year),8 which serves as a driving force to study the one-pot hydrogenation of furfural to these products. However, the conventional catalytic hydrogenation processes used to manufacture these products suffer from drawbacks such as the requirement for high hydrogen (H2) pressures and high temperatures. Furthermore, the hydrogen gas required by these processes is presently manufactured from fossil resources such as natural gas (via energy intensive reforming reactions) and coal, referred to as “grey” and “brown/black” hydrogen respectively.9 Electrocatalytic hydrogenation (ECH) is proposed as a mild alternative (<80 °C under atmospheric pressure) in which the required hydrogen equivalents are produced in situ by water splitting. Importantly, application of renewable electricity to generate “green” hydrogen equivalents during ECH circumvents utilization of fossil-derived hydrogen. Moreover, it enables storage of intermittently produced renewable electricity as chemical energy.10
A typical ECH setup involves an electrolytic cell with two chambers separated by a membrane. Application of an electric potential splits water into oxygen gas, protons (H+ ions), and electrons (e−) at a catalytic anode under acidic conditions; the H+ ions then migrate across a proton exchange membrane (e.g., Nafion™) under the influence of the applied electric potential to a catalytic cathode where they combine with the electrons that migrate through the external circuit, driving cathodic reactions that produce the hydrogenated products.
Several investigators have studied the ECH of furfural using a variety of electrocatalytic cathode materials including supported and non-supported, base and noble metals such as Cu,10–24 Ni,10,11,13,14,18,20,21 Pt,10,13,14,21–23,25–27 Pd,11,17,18,25,26,28–30 Rh,11,17,18 Ru,11,18,31 Pb,10,13,19,21,22 Fe,10,13,20 Al,10,20 Zn,32 Au,33 Ag,33 and Co11,18 as well as alloys such as stainless steel,12,20 oxides such as TiO2,34 In2O3,35 Co3O4,35 Pb2Ru2O7−x,35 and La-doped TiO2,36 phosphides such as Cu3P and Ni2P,27 bimetallics such as NiCu,14,37 PtCo,38 and PdNiB,39 and carbon.10,12,13,15,33,40 Many of these studies have reported furfural transformation to FA, 2-MF and hydrofuroin by ECH, while only a few have reported conversion to the saturated heterocyclic (oxolane) products. Green et al. reported electrocatalytic conversion of furfural to THFA and 2-MTHF on a Pd/C electrocatalyst in a continuous flow cell at 1.75 V. The respective selectivities were 26% and 8%; however, only 6% of the furfural was converted to products.25 Furthermore, it was found that at 1.45 V the current density increased as temperature was raised from 30 °C to 70 °C. However, a decrease in current efficiency for furfural hydrogenation was noted signifying an increase in hydrogen gas production. Green et al. also reported conversion of furfural to THFA on a Pt/C electrocatalyst. Carl et al. reported conversion of furfural to 2-MTHF and THFA along with products such as tetrahydrofuran on hybrid cathodes composed of Pdblack and various loadings of Pd supported on alumina.28 Vapor phase experiments were conducted in a single-pass proton exchange membrane reactor. The highest selectivity for the oxolane products, THFA (∼9%) and 2-MTHF (∼50%), was obtained on an electrocatalyst comprised of Pdblack and 5 wt% Pd/Al2O3. Delima et al. investigated ECH of furfural in a flow reactor consisting of a Pd catalyst electrodeposited on a palladium membrane with an additional catalyst layer sputter-deposited on it.29 The requirement for dissolution of furfural in protic electrolytes was avoided by using a design where the electrochemical hydrogen generation and furfural hydrogenation were physically separated by a palladium membrane that also served as the cathode. The highest selectivities for FA (84%), THFA (98%) and 2-MTHF (14%) was obtained using Pt/Pd/Pd membranes albeit at different current densities, run times and sputter-deposited Pt layer thicknesses. More recently, Stankovic et al. used the same approach to demonstrate that high 2-MTHF selectivity (76%) was obtained at higher current densities (≥200 mA cm−2) when using Pd/Pd membranes.30 Lenk et al. demonstrated conversion of furfural to THFA on Pd, platinized Pt and glassy carbon cathodes coated with Pd and Pt inks.26 The highest THFA selectivity (15.3%) from furfural was observed for coated glassy carbon cathodes with Pd to
Pt ratio of 5
:
1. Chamoulaud et al. reported conversion of furfural to THFA and 2-MTHF at low flow rates and/or high currents using a flow cell in which the cathode was prepared by plating copper on graphite felt.23 A few studies have also noted furfural conversion by ECH to ring-opened products: pentane-1,5-diol on Cu21 and Pb22 cathodes, and glutaraldehyde on a carbon cathode,40 although the yields were not quantified.
The present study investigates the electrocatalytic conversion of furfural to the saturated heterocyclic products, THFA (and 2-MTHF), on ruthenium supported on activated carbon cloth (Ru/ACC). Activated carbon cloth (ACC) was selected as an electrocatalyst support for the present study due to its high surface area and electrical conductivity.41 THFA is conventionally manufactured by hydrogenation of FA on supported Ni catalysts at moderate temperatures (50–100 °C) in both liquid and vapor phase processes.42 It is used as a solvent, particularly for stripping and cleaning formulations, agricultural chemicals, dyes, and printing inks.43 An important application of THFA is in the manufacture of 3,4-dihydro-2H-pyran, a specialty chemical.44 DFT studies have shown that the flat η2 (C–O) configuration is favored for adsorption of furfural on ruthenium (Ru) surfaces, which activates pathways for both formyl group reduction and heteroaromatic ring saturation.45,46 Furthermore, Ru presents a cheaper alternative to both Pd and Pt that have been used in earlier studies on electrochemical transformation of furfural to saturated heterocyclic products. Conversion of furfural to THFA by catalytic hydrogenation on carbon-supported Ru (Ru/C) catalysts has been demonstrated previously by other groups.47–49 Moreover, ECH on Ru/ACC has been used by the Saffron group to successfully upgrade lignin-related phenolic model compounds50,51 and model lignin dimers52 to saturated compounds such as substituted cyclohexanols. Further, an ECH study in 2014 on the aqueous fraction of bio-oil using Ru/ACC noted conversion of its furfural content to THFA.53
In the present study, three factors were varied to assess furfural conversion and selectivity towards THFA by ECH: catholyte solution organic co-solvent (propan-2-ol) content, catholyte solution acid content, and temperature. A factorial experiment design was implemented to investigate the effects of individual factors as well as their interactions on THFA yield. Propan-2-ol, widely used as a solvent for furfural hydrogenation,54 was expected to affect product yields by influencing the distribution of reactants and products between the cathode surface and the catholyte solution. Moreover, an influence of solvents on product selectivity has been reported for catalytic hydrogenation of furfural.55–57 The acidity of the catholyte solution was expected to vary the yields of different hydrogenation products via both cathode surface effects and promotion of side reactions in the catholyte solution, while higher temperatures would enhance conversion and product yields due to more rapid surface reaction kinetics. The carbon mole balance, faradaic efficiency for the desired transformation and THFA yield were also determined under different conditions in follow-up experiments to enable derisking of the electrocatalytic route for conversion of furfural to THFA. Finally, production of saturated heterocycles by ECH of 2-substituted furans (2 MF, FA and 2-furoic acid) was investigated.
:
20 (volume fraction) solution of aqua ammonia (28.0–30.0% NH3) and DI water containing 6.4 wt% hexaammineruthenium(III) chloride [Ru(NH3)6Cl3] for 1 min to saturate the pores. The soaked pieces were dabbed against Kimwipes® to remove the excess solution. The ACC pieces impregnated with Ru were dried overnight at ambient conditions and subsequently vacuum dried for 24 h. The vacuum dried Ru/ACC was then reduced using the electrochemical reduction technique described by Garedew.58 The reduction was carried out in a divided H-cell, in which the two chambers were separated by a Nafion™ 117 membrane (Chemours, Wilmington, DE). 0.2 M hydrochloric acid (HCl) solution was used as the electrolyte in both compartments. The vacuum dried Ru/ACC was the cathode, while a platinum wire (99.95%; Strem Chemicals Newburyport, MA) served as the anode. The H-cell assembly was immersed in a heated water bath that was maintained at a temperature of 60 °C. The current was turned on immediately after immersing the Ru/ACC in the catholyte solution. The Ru/ACC was reduced using a current of 150 mA for approximately 1.5 h. The catholyte solution turned pink upon immersion of the Ru/ACC indicating leaching of the Ru salt. Under the influence of the reduction potential, the color initially changed to light yellow in the first few minutes and subsequently changed to dark blue. The blue color of the catholyte solution then gradually cleared resulting in a silver-grey deposition on the ACC which represented the end point of the electrochemical reduction. The color changes of the catholyte solution are attributed to the different oxidation states of Ru as it undergoes reduction and deposition on the activated carbon cloth fibers. The reduced Ru/ACC (referred to as Ru/ACC more generally) was then stored in a drying cabinet (∼55 °C) before being used for ECH experiments. A photograph of the Ru/ACC is provided in Fig. S1 of the ESI (ESI).†
Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to determine the morphology of the support (ACC) and the electrocatalyst (Ru/ACC). The images were collected on a JSM-6610 LV (JEOL Ltd) scanning electron microscope. Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (elemental analysis) was performed using an Oxford Instruments AZtec system (Oxford Instruments, High Wycomb, Bucks, England), software version 3.3 using a 20 mm2 Silicon Drift Detector (JSM-6610LV) and an ultra-thin window.
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) was performed on a Physical Electronics PHI 5600 instrument equipped with a monochromatic Al source. The spectra were calibrated using the C 1s peak at 285 eV. Data analysis was performed with the CasaXPS software.
The Ru content of the Ru/ACC electrocatalyst was determined by Inductively Coupled Plasma-Optical Emission Spectroscopy (ICP-OES). The analysis was conducted on an Agilent 5800 ICP-OES instrument equipped with AVS 6/7 and SPS 4 Autosampler. The samples were digested in concentrated nitric acid using the CEM Mars 6 Microwave Digestion System. Calibration solutions were prepared from a ruthenium(III) chloride (RuCl3) standard solution (Inorganic Ventures, Christiansburg, VA).
An aqueous HCl solution with or without the organic co-solvent, propan-2-ol, was used as the catholyte solution while the anolyte solution consisted of an aqueous phosphoric acid (H3PO4) solution with the concentration of H3PO4 adjusted to match the pH of the catholyte solution. The H-cell assembly was immersed in a heated water bath to maintain the desired temperature. The Ru/ACC electrocatalyst was subjected to pre-electrolysis at 80 mA for 10 min, after which the requisite amount of the substrate stock solution was added to the cathode compartment resulting in a catholyte solution with a furanic substrate concentration of 0.02 M at the start of a trial. Both compartments contained 13 ml of electrolyte solution. A Xantrex XHR 300–3.5 DC power supply provided constant electric current throughout the trial.
| Factor [code] | Level | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Low (−1) | Center (0) | High (+1) | |
| Catholyte solution propan-2-ol content [A] | 0% (volume fraction) | 10% (volume fraction) | 20% (volume fraction) |
| Catholyte solution acid content [B] | 0.02 M HCl | 0.06 M HCl | 0.16 M HCl |
| Temperature [C] | 25 °C | 37 °C | 50 °C |
485.3 C mol−1. nk is the number of electrons (e−) required to form product k. I is the current. t is the trial run-time.
| S BET (m2 g−1) | V t (cm3 g−1) | V μpore (cm3 g−1) | D p (nm) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Washed and dried ACC | 1090 | 0.476 | 0.414 | 1.74 |
| Ru/ACC | 928 | 0.412 | 0.352 | 1.78 |
SEM images of the washed and dried ACC and Ru/ACC are shown in Fig. 2. It was observed that electrochemical reduction resulted in the deposition of a uniform Ru coating on the activated carbon cloth fibers, as seen in Fig. 2(b) and (c). However, there were some regions, close to the edges of the Ru/ACC sample, where the Ru coating appeared to have peeled off from individual fibers, as seen in Fig. 2(d). This effect may be attributed to the non-uniform current in these regions. The elemental map acquired by EDS (Fig. S3†) revealed a uniform dispersion of Ru on the activated carbon cloth fibers.
XPS was used to probe the surface chemistry of the Ru/ACC electrocatalyst. The Ru 3d and C 1s core level spectra are shown in Fig. 3. Deconvolution of the Ru 3d and C 1s spectra revealed the presence of Ru0 and Ru4+. The peaks at 279.8 eV and 284.0 eV were assigned to Ru0 (metallic state), while the peaks at 280.6 eV and 284.7 eV were associated with Ru4+ (in RuO2).62 The peaks at 284.4 eV and 285.9 eV corresponded to C–C and C–O, respectively. Overall, the XPS analysis demonstrated that a major fraction of Ru deposited on the ACC support was in the metallic state, which indicated that Ru in the precursor salt [Ru(NH3)6Cl3] was reduced by the electrochemical treatment. The re-oxidation of reduced Ru in catalytic materials upon exposure to air has been reported63–65 and might explain the presence of Ru4+ (RuO2). Further, it is possible that RuO2 may undergo reduction to the metallic form under the influence of the reduction potential applied during ECH.
The Ru loading on the ACC support was determined by ICP-OES. Ru/ACC samples were subjected to microwave digestion in concentrated nitric acid (HNO3) at 230 °C. A solid residue was obtained upon digestion of the Ru/ACC samples indicating that the samples were not completely dissolved in the acid. A solid residue was also obtained after digestion of the Ru/ACC samples in HCl–HNO3 mixtures. However, no solid residue was observed upon digestion of the washed and dried ACC (with no Ru) samples in HNO3 indicating that the residual solids obtained upon digestion of Ru/ACC contained Ru. These observations are consistent with the reported literature where it has been shown that Ru (particularly, Ru metal and anhydrous RuO2) is not completely recovered by acid digestion, even in aqua regia.66,67 Nonetheless, analysis of the HNO3 solutions obtained after separating the residual solids revealed a Ru loading of 1.39 wt% (±0.04 wt% std. error). Note that the reported loading does not account for the Ru present in the residual solids. The vacuum dried Ru/ACC samples that had not been subjected to electrochemical reduction were also digested in HNO3 at 230 °C. Importantly, no residual solids were observed upon digestion of the unreduced, vacuum dried Ru/ACC samples. The Ru loading determined by analysis of the HNO3 solution was 4.30 wt% (±0.70 wt% std error). Even though the reported Ru loading for the unreduced, vacuum dried Ru/ACC does not account for losses during electrochemical reduction, it represents an upper bound for the expected Ru loading on electrochemically reduced Ru/ACC. Digestion of Ru/ACC by a fusion method66 could be considered for more accurate determination of Ru loading in future investigations.
O) to form FA followed by heteroaromatic ring saturation; or second, heteroaromatic ring saturation to tetrahydrofurfural followed by hydrogenation of the formyl group. DFT calculations by Banerjee and Mushrif (B&M) have indicated that for vapor phase reactants and products, the reaction may proceed via either pathway on Ru since the free energy barriers of the rate limiting steps along both pathways are comparable.45 Significant quantities of FA and no tetrahydrofurfural were observed after passage of 100 mA of current for 2 h under different conditions, suggesting that ECH of furfural on Ru/ACC proceeds via the former pathway. Studies by Merat et al.49 and Ordomsky et al.68 have proposed a similar pathway for formation of THFA during liquid phase furfural hydrogenation on Ru/C catalysts. The B&M DFT calculations also indicated that vapor phase hydrodeoxygenation of furfural to 2-MTHF in the presence of a Ru catalyst proceeds via formation of 2-MF; importantly, this transformation is unlikely to involve an FA intermediate.45 No 2-MF was detected by GC-MS although traces of 2-methyl-4,5-dihydrofuran (identified by matching the mass spectrum with the built-in NIST library) were detected in experiments with significant 2-MTHF formation. Information on the conditions required to produce significant quantities of 2-MTHF from furfural is included in the ESI.†
The carbon mole balance and faradaic efficiency were computed based on three compounds, the reactant furfural and the two major products, FA and THFA, which were quantified using GC-MS. The highest carbon mole balance closure, 60%, was obtained at the −1,−1,−1 conditions while the lowest closure, 27%, was obtained at the +1,+1,+1 conditions. Low faradaic efficiencies, <12%, were obtained under all conditions. It is noted that carbon mole balances and faradaic efficiencies would be marginally higher than the reported values if the yields of trace products such as 2-MTHF had been quantified. Other investigations on ECH of furfural in batch mode20,24 have also reported similarly low carbon mole balance closures. The low carbon mole balance closures may be attributed to three major factors, namely, undesired side reactions, losses due to migration of a species to the anode compartment, and evaporation. Jung and Biddinger identified two types of undesired side reactions that occur during ECH of furfural: acid promoted homogeneous reactions and electron transfer mediated polymerization reactions.24,69 The higher molecular weight products (polymeric compounds) expected from both these reactions are not detected by GC-MS. It is noted that in the context of the present investigation the term ‘acid promoted side reactions’ includes acid catalyzed degradation/polymerization reactions of both substrates adsorbed to Ru/ACC (or ACC) and the Nafion™ membrane and substrates present in the catholyte solution.
Analysis of the DCM extracts of the anolyte solution at the end of the experimental runs confirmed that small quantities of reactant and products migrated to the anode compartment, though the low levels suggested that other loss mechanisms were dominant. Moreover, the hydrodeoxygenated products, 2-MF and 2-MTHF, have low boiling points at atmospheric pressure, 63.2–65.6 °C and 80.2 °C, respectively,43 which suggests that their evaporative loss from the system could be significant, especially in the experiments run at 50 °C.
The yield of THFA served as the basis for analysis of the factorial design. The analysis of variance (ANOVA) in Table S1† identified only one statistically significant factor, catholyte solution acid content, at a 95% confidence level. None of the other factors or higher order interactions significantly affected the yield of THFA. Furthermore, it was determined by the center point analysis that curvature was insignificant, confirming the absence of a maximum for the THFA yield within the ranges of the factors analyzed. Based on the results presented, to maximize yield of THFA, ECH of furfural must be carried out at low temperature (25 °C) in a catholyte solution with low acid content (relatively high pH) and no organic co-solvent (propan-2-ol). The experimental conditions that resulted in the highest yield or selectivity of THFA (or 2-MTHF) in various studies are summarized in Table S2.† Although the temperature does not significantly affect the yield of THFA, operating at lower temperatures at commercial scale would reduce both costs associated with heating and lowered yields due to evaporative losses. The decision regarding use of the organic co-solvent, propan-2-ol, is more complicated. For example, in experiments run at 25 °C in 0.16 M HCl solution without propan-2-ol, the reaction products, FA and THFA, were equally distributed between the Ru/ACC and the catholyte solution, but when the catholyte solution contained 20% propan-2-ol (volume fraction), more than 90% of the products were present in the catholyte solution. At larger scales, using a co-solvent adds costs associated with its downstream separation and recovery. Further, the faradaic efficiency would be reduced if active sites are blocked by the organic co-solvent. However, when co-solvent is not used, a greater fraction of the products would remain adsorbed to the cathode, presenting a significant challenge with respect to product recovery for processes operating in continuous mode. In such situations, the electrocatalyst would have to be periodically regenerated to recover the products. Additionally, the adsorbed products may occlude active sites over long operation times reducing electrocatalyst performance.
ECH of furfural on ACC without Ru (washed and dried ACC) produced FA, yield 43%, along with hydrofuroin and trace amounts of 2-MTHF. The formation of hydrofuroin was confirmed by matching the GC retention time and mass spectrum for the product obtained by reagent-based reduction of furoin with sodium borohydride (NaBH4). The result for furfural electroreduction on ACC is consistent with the non-catalytic electroreduction of furfural to FA on carbon cathodes reported by others10,12,13,40 and confirmed that Ru active sites were essential for heteroaromatic ring saturation to form THFA. Jung and Biddinger have suggested that promotion of FA polymerization by an electron transfer mediated process could explain the lower carbon mole balance closure under conditions where FA is the primary product.24 Additionally, Shang et al. found that in aqueous electrolytes (pH 0, 7 and 13), carbon paper cathodes showed higher selectivity towards hydrofuroin formation compared to copper foam cathodes which showed higher selectivity towards FA formation.15 Nilges and Schröder10 and Diaz et al.40 also identified hydrofuroin as the major product of furfural ECH on carbon cathodes in acidic media. Shang et al. attributed the difference in product selectivities to the less negative potential required for formation of an adsorbed hydrogen atom on copper as compared to carbon. Thus, on copper cathodes the ketyl radical [(C4H3O)C·(H)(OH)] underwent hydrogenation to produce FA whereas on carbon cathodes it underwent radical dimerization to produce hydrofuroin. The pathways for formation of FA and hydrofuroin are shown in Scheme 2.
FA and THFA were also subjected to individual control experiments involving no passage of electric current through the H-cell for 2 h in 0.02 M aqueous HCl solution at 25 °C. The results are summarized in Fig. 5. An incomplete carbon mole balance closure, 72% and 68% respectively, was observed for both species. Similar to furfural, acid catalyzed polymerization of FA has also been the subject of several investigations.74–77 Thermochemistry calculations by Kim et al. indicate that acid catalyzed FA polymerization proceeds via protonation of the hydroxy group in FA leading to the formation of a carbenium ion [(C4H3O)C+(H)2] and water.78 An attack on the carbenium ion from the C5 position of FA with simultaneous removal of a proton resulted in the formation of a dimer containing a –CH2– bridge. Chain propagation involved reaction of carbenium ions with the oligomers. The formation of colored species was explained by a hydride ion shift from the oligomer to the carbenium ion followed by removal of a proton yielding a conjugated diene. Importantly, these polymerization reactions were shown to occur at room temperature in the presence of mineral acids. It was anticipated that THFA, being more stable due to its saturated nature, would not undergo such degradation/polymerization in the presence of mineral acids.43 Therefore, extraction efficiencies for furfural, FA and THFA from 0.02 M aqueous HCl solutions into DCM were computed to determine what fraction of the incomplete carbon mole balance closure was due to extraction losses from the catholyte solution. FA and THFA are completely miscible with water, while furfural has a finite solubility in water.3 Furfural and FA were completely recovered by extraction into DCM, but THFA was only partially recovered. However, even after accounting for the average extraction efficiency of THFA, 71% (±2% std error), the carbon mole balance could not be closed. It is noted that the extraction efficiency for THFA from the catholyte solution was used to correct only the relevant values reported in Fig. 5 and 6; similar corrections were not applied to values reported elsewhere.
The furfural hydrogenation products, FA and THFA, were subjected to ECH on Ru/ACC in 0.02 M aqueous HCl solution by passing 100 mA current for 2 h at 25 °C. The results as compared to furfural ECH are summarized in Fig. 6. FA underwent nearly complete conversion, and THFA, yield 49%, was the primary product. No reduction products were observed following THFA ECH. Even after accounting for the THFA extraction efficiency, incomplete carbon mole balance closure was observed in both cases, 60% and 77% respectively. These losses were greater than those observed in control experiments involving no current passage indicating the occurrence of electrochemically caused side reactions. The control experiments on FA and THFA demonstrate that losses due to both acid promoted side reactions and electron transfer mediated side reactions were greater for FA than THFA. Furthermore, a purple coloration of the Nafion™ membrane in the region contacting the catholyte solution, as shown in Fig. S5,† is noted for experiments where FA was the reactant. This coloration indicates that FA interaction with the Nafion™ membrane likely represents another FA loss mechanism.
The mechanism for the electron transfer mediated side reactions is not well defined. However, a study by Staker provides some insights on the likely mechanism of such reactions during electrolytic reduction of furfural.79 Staker observed formation of a non-pinacolic dimer on a lead amalgam cathode, that has a high overpotential for hydrogen evolution. The proposed mechanism for dimer formation involved proton addition to the carbonyl oxygen in furfural leading to the formation of a carbenium ion [(C4H3O)C+(H)(OH)] which was then attacked from the C5 position of FA. Concomitant removal of a proton resulted in the formation of a dimer containing a –CHOH– bridge. It is hypothesized that in the present study such reactions occur on portions of the Ru/ACC electrocatalyst with no Ru deposition. Further investigation is required to establish detailed mechanisms for depletion of the compounds (furfural, FA and THFA) by electrochemical and acid promoted processes. Overall, based on the control experiments, the order of susceptibility to both acid promoted side reactions and electron transfer mediated side reactions is summarized as: FA > furfural ∼ THFA.
The results of the above experiments suggest that there may exist a catholyte solution with an optimal pH obtained by using aqueous HCl solutions of concentration lower than 0.02 M where the rate of the side reactions is reduced, improving the yield of desired THFA. Therefore, ECH of furfural in a 0.002 M aqueous HCl solution was investigated. The high cell potential required due to the low conductivity of the 0.002 M HCl solution was avoided by addition of NaCl, concentration 0.02 M, as a supporting electrolyte in the catholyte solution. The concentration of H3PO4 solution in the anode compartment was adjusted to match the pH of the 0.02 M HCl solution. The results obtained were very similar to furfural ECH in the 0.02 M HCl solution suggesting that the electron transfer mediated side reactions were the primary cause for low carbon mole balance closures.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d4su00260a |
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