Synergistic Photocatalytic Production of H2O2 and Imines via Oxygen-Enriched Acetonitrile Medium and Benzylamine Oxidation
Abstract
Photocatalytic technology has emerged as a sustainable and efficient strategy for chemical synthesis, yet its application in H2O2 production is limited by low dissolved oxygen availability and inefficient charge carrier utilization. To overcome these limitations, we developed an innovative photocatalytic system that uses acetonitrile as the solvent. Due to its markedly higher oxygen solubility compared to water, this system significantly improves oxygen mass transfer and overall reaction kinetics. Furthermore, we introduced benzylamine oxidation as an alternative to the conventional water oxidation reaction. Benefiting from its favorable oxidation potential, the oxidation of benzylamine not only requires lower energy input but also couples synergistically with H2O2 generation, forming a bifunctional catalytic system that significantly enhances the efficiency of H2O2 synthesis. The system achieves a high H2O2 production rate of 12.03 mmol·g-1·h-1 and a concentration of 28.9 mmol/L, significantly outperforming conventional aqueous-phase systems. Subsequent distillation and extraction processes concentrated the aqueous H2O2 solution to 413.43 mM (>1 wt%), approaching the concentration of medical-grade H2O2. Mechanistic investigations confirm that the reaction follows a two-electron oxygen reduction pathway. This work not only presents a novel and sustainable route for H2O2 production but also demonstrates the potential for photocatalytic synthesis of other high-value chemicals.
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