Iodine-Catalysed Dissolution of Elemental Gold in Ethanol

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Abstract

Gold is a scarce element in the Earth's crust but indispensable in modern electronic devices. New, sustainable methods of gold recycling are essential to meet the growing eco-social demand of gold. Here, we describe a simple, inexpensive, and environmentally benign dissolution of gold under mild conditions. Gold dissolves quantitatively in ethanol using 2-mercaptobenzimidazole as a ligand in the presence of a catalytic amount of iodine. Mechanistically, the dissolution of gold begins when I2 oxidizes Au0 and forms a [AuII2]− species, which undergoes subsequent ligand-exchange reactions and forms a stable bis-ligand AuI complex. H2O2 oxidizes free iodide and regenerated I2 returns back to the catalytic cycle. Addition of a reductant to the reaction mixture precipitates gold quantitatively and partially regenerates the ligand. We anticipate our work will open a new pathway to more sustainable metal recycling with the utilization of just catalytic amounts of reagents and green solvents.

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Zupanc, A., Heliövaara, E., Moslova, K., Eronen, A., Kemell, M., Podlipnik, Č., … Repo, T. (2022). Iodine-Catalysed Dissolution of Elemental Gold in Ethanol. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 61(14). https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202117587

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