(363e) Computational Exploration of CO2 Hydrogenation to Methanol Catalyzed By a Frustrated Lewis Pair within a Defective Uio-66
AIChE Annual Meeting
2019
2019 AIChE Annual Meeting
Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
Thermochemical CO2 Reduction I: C1 Products
Tuesday, November 12, 2019 - 1:42pm to 2:00pm
Metal-organic framework (MOF)-based catalysts have shown enormous potential in CO2 conversion to high-value added chemicals. Herein, we report a density functional theory (DFT) study on CO2 hydrogenation over a defective UiO-66, in which a frustrated Lewis pair (FLP) is created by removing one organic linker. The conversion of CO2 to methanol (CH3OH) is considered as a three-stage transformation: (1) CO2 is hydrogenated into formic acid (HCOOH); (2) HCOOH is converted to formaldehyde (HCHO) via hydrogenation and dehydration; (3) HCHO is hydrogenated into CH3OH. The reaction mechanisms are investigated in detail by computing the optimized structures and the corresponding Gibbs free energies for the elementary processes involved in the transformation. For CO2 hydrogenation to HCOOH, three pathways are computed comparatively. In Pathway I, adsorbed CO2 reacts with H2 to directly form HCOOH and this step features a high free energy barrier comparable to that in the gas phase. In another two pathways, adsorbed H2 is first split into a proton (H+) and a hydride (Hâ) on the FLP, then CO2 is hydrogenated into HCOOH via stepwise mechanism (Pathway II) or concerted mechanism (Pathway III). The DFT calculations show that the free energy barriers in Pathway II and III are reduced significantly compared to that in Pathway I, and Pathway III is the most favourable for CO2 hydrogenation to HCOOH. Subsequent calculations suggest that the conversion of HCOOH to HCHO and further to CH3OH is also facile via H2 dissociation and the concerted transfer of H+ and Hâ to HCOOH and HCHO. These results highlight the importance of FLP-assisted heterolytic dissociation of H2 in promoting CO2 hydrogenation. This study suggests that the defective UiO-66 with a FLP might be a potential catalyst for CO2 hydrogenation, and it would facilitate the bottom-up design of efficient MOF-based catalysts for CO2 utilization.