posted on 2023-05-12, 18:07authored byHaoyi Li, Chuanye Xiong, Muchun Fei, Lu Ma, Hongna Zhang, Xingxu Yan, Peter Tieu, Yucheng Yuan, Yuhan Zhang, James Nyakuchena, Jier Huang, Xiaoqing Pan, Matthias M. Waegele, De-en Jiang, Dunwei Wang
Atomically dispersed catalysts such as single-atom catalysts
have
been shown to be effective in selectively oxidizing methane, promising
a direct synthetic route to value-added oxygenates such as acetic
acid or methanol. However, an important challenge of this approach
has been that the loading of active sites by single-atom catalysts
is low, leading to a low overall yield of the products. Here, we report
an approach that can address this issue. It utilizes a metal–organic
framework built with porphyrin as the linker, which provides high
concentrations of binding sites to support atomically dispersed rhodium.
It is shown that up to 5 wt% rhodium loading can be achieved with
excellent dispersity. When used for acetic acid synthesis by methane
oxidation, a new benchmark performance of 23.62 mmol·gcat–1·h–1 was measured. Furthermore,
the catalyst exhibits a unique sensitivity to light, producing acetic
acid (under illumination, up to 66.4% selectivity) or methanol (in
the dark, up to 65.0% selectivity) under otherwise identical reaction
conditions.