Unveiling Janus Chemical Processes in Contact-Electro-Chemistry through Oxygen Reduction Reactions
Article 2025 en
Authors
TG
Ting Gan
ZY
Zhe Yang
SL
Shaoxin Li
Abstract
1 min read
Oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), operating via four-electron (H<sub>2</sub>O) or two-electron (H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>) pathways, underpins critical processes in energy conversion and biological metabolism. Solid-liquid contact electrification enables 2e<sup>-</sup> ORR for both pollutant oxidation degradation and metal reduction without external metal catalysts. However, the criteria dictating oxidation versus reduction in such Janus contact-electro-chemistry (CE-Chemistry) systems remain unclear. This study systematically demonstrates that the redox selectivity in CE-Chemistry is controlled by the standard electrode potential (SEP) of the reactants, with a clear threshold distinguishing the oxidation and reduction pathways. Reduction of metal ions (e.g., [AuCl<sub>4</sub>]<sup>-</sup>, Pd<sup>2+</sup>, [PtCl<sub>4</sub>]<sup>2-</sup> Ag<sup>+</sup>, Rh<sup>3+</sup>, and Ir<sup>3+</sup>) was achieved when their SEPs lie between the 2e<sup>-</sup> ORR (<i>E</i><sup>0</sup> = 0.695 V vs NHE) and the 4e<sup>-</sup> ORR (<i>E</i><sup>0</sup> = 1.229 V vs NHE). Conversely, SEPs below the 2e<sup>-</sup> ORR threshold favored oxidation (e.g., ferrocyanide). For the first time, methanol-to-formaldehyde oxidation was achieved in both aqueous and nonaqueous CE-Chemistry. Remarkably, the formaldehyde production rate in dimethyl sulfoxide was 25 times higher than in aqueous systems, which has already surpassed some photocatalytic processes. This study provides a comprehensive mechanistic framework for CE-Chemistry, highlighting the pivotal role of SEPs in regulating its Janus redox properties and the tunable radical reactivity in nonaqueous environments.
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