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A Solar to Chemical Strategy: Green Hydrogen as a Means, Not an End

Global Challenges 2023 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Gabriel A. A. Diab, Marcos A. R. da Silva, Guilherme F. S. R. Rocha, Luís Fernando Guimarães Nolêto, Andrea Rogolino, João Paulo de Mesquita, Pablo Jiménez‐Calvo, Ivo F. Teixeira

Summary

This paper is not about microplastics — it reviews photocatalytic approaches for producing green hydrogen and commodity chemicals (ammonia, hydrogen peroxide, methanol) from sunlight and water as part of decarbonizing the chemical industry.

Green hydrogen is the key to the chemical industry achieving net zero emissions. The chemical industry is responsible for almost 2% of all CO2 emissions, with half of it coming from the production of simple commodity chemicals, such as NH3, H2O2, methanol, and aniline. Despite electrolysis driven by renewable power sources emerging as the most promising way to supply all the green hydrogen required in the production chain of these chemicals, in this review, it is worth noting that the photocatalytic route may be underestimated and can hold a bright future for this topic. In fact, the production of H2 by photocatalysis still faces important challenges in terms of activity, engineering, and economic feasibility. However, photocatalytic systems can be tailored to directly convert sunlight and water (or other renewable proton sources) directly into chemicals, enabling a solar-to-chemical strategy. Here, a series of recent examples are presented, demonstrating that photocatalysis can be successfully employed to produce the most important commodity chemicals, especially on NH3, H2O2, and chemicals produced by reduction reactions. The replacement of fossil-derived H2 in the synthesis of these chemicals can be disruptive, essentially safeguarding the transition of the chemical industry to a low-carbon economy.

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