| Literature DB >> 27351805 |
Ning Zhang1, Xiyu Li1, Huacheng Ye1, Shuangming Chen1, Huanxin Ju1, Daobin Liu1, Yue Lin1, Wei Ye1, Chengming Wang1, Qian Xu1, Junfa Zhu1, Li Song1, Jun Jiang1, Yujie Xiong1.
Abstract
Modern development of chemical manufacturing requires a substantial reduction in energy consumption and catalyst cost. Sunlight-driven chemical transformation by metal oxides holds great promise for this goal; however, it remains a grand challenge to efficiently couple solar energy into many catalytic reactions. Here we report that defect engineering on oxide catalyst can serve as a versatile approach to bridge light harvesting with surface reactions by ensuring species chemisorption. The chemisorption not only spatially enables the transfer of photoexcited electrons to reaction species, but also alters the form of active species to lower the photon energy requirement for reactions. In a proof of concept, oxygen molecules are activated into superoxide radicals on defect-rich tungsten oxide through visible-near-infrared illumination to trigger organic aerobic couplings of amines to corresponding imines. The excellent efficiency and durability for such a highly important process in chemical transformation can otherwise be virtually impossible to attain by counterpart materials.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27351805 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6b04629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419