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- 2019
Structural principles to steer the selectivity of the electrocatalytic reduction of aliphatic ketones on platinumDOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41929-019-0229-3 Abstract: Due to a general feedstock shift, the chemical industry is charged with the task of finding ways to transform renewable ketones into value-added products. A viable route to do so is the electrochemical hydrogenation of the carbonyl functional group. Here we report a study on acetone reduction at platinum single-crystal electrodes using online electrochemical mass spectroscopy, in situ Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. Acetone reduction at platinum displays a remarkable structural sensitivity: not only the activity, but also the product distribution depends on the surface crystallographic orientation. At Pt(111) neither adsorption nor hydrogenation occur. A decomposition reaction that deactivates the electrode happens at Pt(100). Acetone reduction proceeds at the (110) steps: Pt[(n?–?1)(111)?×?(110)] electrodes produce 2-propanol and Pt[(n?+?1)(100)?×?(110)] electrodes produce propane. Using density functional theory calculations, we built a selectivity map to explain the intricacies of the acetone reduction on platinum. Finally, we extend our conclusions to the reduction of higher aliphatic ketones
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