Abstract

Electrochemical reactions can access a significant range of driving forces under operationally mild conditions and are thus envisioned to play a key role in decarbonizing chemical manufacturing. However, many reactions with well-established thermochemical precedents remain difficult to achieve electrochemically. For example, hydroformylation (thermo-HFN) is an industrially important reaction that couples olefins and carbon monoxide (CO) to make aldehydes. However, the electrochemical analogue of hydroformylation (electro-HFN), which uses protons and electrons instead of hydrogen gas, represents a complex C-C bond-forming reaction that is difficult to achieve at heterogeneous electrocatalysts. In this work, we import Rh-based thermo-HFN catalysts onto electrode surfaces to unlock electro-HFN reactivity. At mild conditions of room temperature and 5 bar CO, we achieve Faradaic efficiencies of up to 15% and turnover frequencies of up to 0.7 h-1. This electro-HFN rate is an order of magnitude greater than the corresponding thermo-HFN rate at the same catalyst, temperature, and pressure. Reaction kinetics and operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy provide evidence for an electro-HFN mechanism that involves distinct elementary steps relative to thermo-HFN. This work demonstrates a step-by-step experimental strategy for electrifying a well-studied thermochemical reaction to unveil a new electrocatalyst for a complex and underexplored electrochemical reaction.

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