The addition of methylamine to calcium tetrahydridoborate enhances calcium ion conductivity significantly by increasing structural flexibility and void space as a function of increasing methylamine content. However, this results in decreasing mec...
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Light‐Induced Fe‐LMCT Catalysis for Redox‐Coupled Conversion of NOx and SO2 Mixture
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A light-induced Fe-LMCT (ligand-to-metal charge transfer) catalytic system is demonstrated, whereby continuous conversion of NO to N2 and SO2 to SO4 2− is achieved, with the formation of N2O byproducts suppressed via LMCT-driven spatial segregation of redox pathways.
Abstract
The coexistent nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sulfur dioxide (SO2) in flue gas pose inherent challenges for simultaneous removal due to their disparate reactivities. Conventional sequential treatments for their simultaneous removal face major issues of catalyst deactivation and byproduct generation. Here, we develop a subtle strategy using light-induced ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) catalysis with Fe(II) ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA-Feᴵᴵ) to achieve redox-coupled conversion of NO and SO2 mixtures. LMCT excitation in EDTA-FeII induces directional charge separation under irradiation, routing photogenerated electrons (e⁻) to Feᴵᴵ for driving selective NO-to-N2 conversion (selectivity: 99.89%), while photogenerated holes (h+) oxidize SO2 to SO4 2⁻ (selectivity: 96.34%). This spatial segregation of redox pathways suppresses N2O generation, enabling continuous operation with 90.3% NO and nearly 100% SO2 removal efficiency. Mechanism studies reveal the LMCT-enhanced charge transfer from carboxyl/amino groups to Fe centers, while in situ EPR confirms the •SO3 2⁻ radical-mediated h+ scavenging that accelerates charge separation and utilization. This work establishes Fe-LMCT catalysis as a sustainable platform for gas-phase pollutants remediation, achieving unprecedented selectivity through precise redox pathway control.
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