Abstract
Aldehydes are selectively oxidized to carboxylates on group 11 metals at low potentials (<0.4 V vs. RHE) in alkaline media. This process can occur by a pathway that generates H2 gas from the aldehyde, known as electro-oxidative dehydrogenation (EOD) or anodic hydrogen production. The EOD process occurs with transfer of only one electron per aldehyde, whereas typical oxidation with discharge of hydrogen to form water is a two-electron process. Here, we study the catalytic activity and selectivity toward H2 of Au, Ag, and Cu electrodes using benzaldehyde with rotating disk and ring-disk electrode (RDE/RRDE) techniques. The average number of electrons per benzaldehyde molecule obtained via H2 detection by RRDE agrees with that obtained via Koutecký-Levich analysis conducted at various rotation rates. We find that Au and Ag have much higher H2 and benzoate formation rates than Cu, but that Cu can perform the reaction at about 0.2 V lower overpotentials. On all three materials, benzaldehyde oxidation has high selectivity to anodic H2 (one-electron pathway) below ~0.5 V vs. RHE, but, with increasing potential, the selectivity shifts to H-oxidation forming water (two-electron pathway).
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