Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2009, 48, 3322–3325 doi: 10.1002/anie.200806058 Nr. 15/2009 Snatched From the AirCarbon dioxide as a carbon source—a carbene catalyst opens new perspectivesContact: Yugen Zhang, Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, Biopolis (Singapore) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Conversion of Carbon Dioxide to Methanol with Silanes over N-Heterocyclic Carbene Catalysts It’s
the reason why chemists envy green plants: by using photosynthesis,
plants can easily fix the carbon dioxide that is so plentiful in air to
make biomass, or organic compounds. Chemists would also like to be able
to simply produce carbon compounds out of CO2 from air. In
contrast to the usual sources of carbon used today—fossil fuels and
natural gas—carbon dioxide is a renewable resource and an
environmentally friendly chemical reagent. Unfortunately,
its carbon–oxygen bonds are too strong to be broken easily. Researchers
working with Yugen Zhang and Jackie Y. Ying at the Institute of
Bioengineering and Nanotechnology in Singapore have now developed a
novel reaction scheme by which CO2 can be efficiently
converted into methanol under very mild conditions. As reported in the
journal Angewandte Chemie, it is based on an N-heterocyclic
carbene catalyst and a silane as the reducing agent.
 © Wiley-VCH
The
basic framework of an N-heterocyclic carbene is a five-membered ring
made of two nitrogen and three carbon atoms. Instead of having the usual
four bonds, one of these carbon atoms only has two. The two electrons
left over in the form of a lone pair, which makes this species highly
reactive—reactive enough to attack CO2.
The
researchers in Singapore produced the carbene catalyst used in the reaction in
situ from a precursor. The carbene activates the CO2, but
is then split off again to end the reaction cycle in its original state.
The formal reaction partner is a hydrosilane, an organosilicon compound
that acts as a reducing agent. The reaction product into which the CO2
is converted can easily be collected in the form of methanol in the last
step of the reaction series. Methanol is an important starting material
for many chemical syntheses and serves as an alternative fuel and as a raw
material for the production of energy in methanol fuel cells.
The
big advantage: unlike prior reaction mechanisms using metal-containing
catalysts, air can be used as the source of the CO2 because
the carbene catalyst is not sensitive to oxygen. The carbene is more
efficient than the metal-containing catalysts as well, and the reaction
can be carried out under very mild conditions.
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