Solar fuels by heterogeneous photocatalysis: From understanding chemical bases to process development

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Abstract

The development of sustainable yet efficient technologies to store solar light into high energy molecules, such as hydrocarbons and hydrogen, is a pivotal challenge in 21st century society. In the field of photocatalysis, a wide variety of chemical routes can be pursued to obtain solar fuels but the two most promising are carbon dioxide photoreduction and photoreforming of biomass-derived substrates. Despite their great potentialities, these technologies still need to be improved to represent a reliable alternative to traditional fuels, in terms of both catalyst design and photoreactor engineering. This review highlights the chemical fundamentals of different photocatalytic reactions for solar fuels production and provides a mechanistic insight on proposed reaction pathways. Also, possible cutting-edge strategies to obtain solar fuels are reported, focusing on how the chemical bases of the investigated reaction affect experimental choices.

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Olivo, A., Zanardo, D., Ghedini, E., Menegazzo, F., & Signoretto, M. (2018, September 1). Solar fuels by heterogeneous photocatalysis: From understanding chemical bases to process development. ChemEngineering. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/chemengineering2030042

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