Visible-Light-Driven Aerobic Oxidation of HCl to Cl2 at Room Temperature

Abstract

The oxidative conversion of hydrogen chloride (HCl) to chlorine (Cl2) is a pivotal reaction for valorizing industrial byproduct HCl in a sustainable manner. Traditional approaches, such as the Kel-Chlor and Deacon processes, suffer from several limitations including high energy demands, reliance on corrosive sulfuric acid, and catalyst deactivation under impure conditions. Herein, we report a sulfuric acid-free, ambient-temperature strategy for HCl oxidation driven solely by visible light. This metal-free process employs sodium nitrite (NaNO2) as catalyst and achieves exceptional performance using either LED-based visible light or natural sunlight as the sole energy input. Under optimized conditions, the system achieves complete (100%) conversion of atmospheric oxygen to Cl2, and over 80% conversion of HCl to Cl2using visible-light LED illumination. Notably, solar-driven operation also enables quantitative oxygen-to-chlorine conversion without any external heating or dehydration pretreatment. The process reaches an energy conversion efficiency over 180 molCl₂•kWh-1 , underscoring its potential as a scalable, energy-efficient, and environmentally benign alternative to conventional HCl oxidation technologies. These findings establish a new paradigm in chlorine recovery by demonstrating the feasibility of a visible-light-driven, sulfuric acid-free Kel-Chlor variant, offering significant implications for green chemistry, industrial process intensification, and decentralized chlorine production.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Sep 2025
Accepted
19 Oct 2025
First published
20 Oct 2025

Catal. Sci. Technol., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Visible-Light-Driven Aerobic Oxidation of HCl to Cl2 at Room Temperature

L. Xu, C. Mei and W. Lu, Catal. Sci. Technol., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5CY01074H

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