A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Alcohol-assisted hydrothermal synthesis of hydroxyl-rich hydrothermal carbon facilitates the oxygen reduction reaction for efficient production of H2O2




AuthorsWang, Junjie; Zhang, Chunyan; Guo, Jing; Li, Jianwei; Zhang, Xiaohu; Yang, Yi; Wang, Pei; Wang, Shengyao; Li, Hao; Chen, Hao; Cai, Peng; Cao, Feifei; Ding, Xing

PublisherElsevier B.V.

Publication year2025

JournalChemical Engineering Journal

Journal name in sourceChemical Engineering Journal

Article number167215

Volume521

ISSN1385-8947

eISSN1873-3212

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2025.167215

Web address https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2025.167215


Abstract

Photocatalytic H2O2 production using biomass-derived carbon catalysts is a sustainable strategy, yet the role of surface functional groups in governing reaction kinetics remains ineffectively explored. Herein, a series of hydrothermal carbon (HTCs) photocatalysts are synthesised from sucrose in five alcoholic solvents, with the ethanol-derived catalyst (Suc-EtOH) exhibiting a remarkable 85.9 % higher H2O2 yield than the water-derived counterpart (Suc-H2O). Systematic characterization reveals that the Suc-EtOH possesses enriched surface hydroxyl groups, which are demonstrated to correlate positively with H2O2 production efficiency. Combined experimental and theoretical analyses elucidate the dual role of hydroxyls: (1) enhancing O2 adsorption and (2) facilitating the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). The universality of this alcohol-mediated hydroxylation strategy is further validated using diverse carbon precursors (starch, fructose, and cellulose), demonstrating its efficacy for simple biomass substrates. This work identifies a quantitative correlation between the surface hydroxyl density of Suc-EtOH catalysts and the kinetics of H2O2 generation. Furthermore, it provides theoretical guidance for the design of biomass-derived metal-free photocatalysts.


Funding information in the publication
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos. 22076055 and 52372081, 52073110), the Young Topnotch Talent Training Program in Hubei Province (310-119024043), the Knowledge Innovation Program of Wuhan-Shuguang Project (No. 2022020801020226), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (Nos. 2662023PY010, 2662023LXPY002, 2662025HXPY001 and 2662024JC013).


Last updated on 2025-16-09 at 15:39