Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry Stanford University Stanford California 94305 USA
2. Department of Chemistry University of Isfahan Isfahan 81746 Iran
3. College of Chemical Engineering Shijiazhuang University Shijiazhuang 050037 China
Abstract
AbstractA straightforward nebulized spray system is designed to explore the hydrogenation of carbon dioxide (CO2) within water microdroplets surrounded by different gases such as carbon dioxide, nitrogen, oxygen, and compressed air. The collected droplets are analyzed using water‐suppressed nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). Formate anion (HCOO−), acetate anion (CH3COO−), ethylene glycol (HOCH2CH2OH), and methane (CH4) are detected when water is nebulized. This pattern persisted when the water is saturated with CO2, indicating that CO2 in the nebulizing gas triggers the formation of these small organics. In a pure CO2 atmosphere, the formate anion concentration is determined to be ≈70 µm, referenced to dimethyl sulfoxide, which has been introduced as an internal standard in the collected water droplets. This study highlights the power of water microdroplets to initiate unexpected chemistry for the transformation of CO2 to small organic compounds.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Air Force Office of Scientific Research