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  4. Hydrogen storage and delivery: immobilization of a highly active homogeneous catalyst for the decomposition of formic acid to hydrogen and carbon dioxide
 
research article

Hydrogen storage and delivery: immobilization of a highly active homogeneous catalyst for the decomposition of formic acid to hydrogen and carbon dioxide

Gan, Weijia  
•
Dyson, Paul J.  
•
Laurenczy, Gabor  
2009
REACTION KINETICS AND CATALYSIS LETTERS

The homogeneous catalytic system, based on water-soluble ruthenium(II)– TPPTS catalyst (TPPTS = meta-trisulfonated triphenylphosphine), selectively decomposes HCOOH into H2 and CO2 in aqueous solution. Although this reaction results in only two gas products, heterogeneous catalysts could be advantageous for recycling, especially for dilute formic acid solutions, or for mobile, portable applications. Several approaches have been used to immobilize/solidify the homogeneous ruthenium– TPPTS catalyst based on ion exchange, coordination and physical absorption. The activity of the various heterogeneous catalysts for the decomposition of formic acid has been determined. These heterogenized catalysts offer the advantage of easy catalyst separation/recycling in dilute formic acid, or for mobile, portable applications.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1007/s11144-009-0096-z
Web of Science ID

WOS:000271803800002

Author(s)
Gan, Weijia  
Dyson, Paul J.  
Laurenczy, Gabor  
Date Issued

2009

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Published in
REACTION KINETICS AND CATALYSIS LETTERS
Volume

98

Issue

2

Start page

205

End page

213

Subjects

Hydrogen storage

•

Formic acid decomposition

•

Homogeneous catalysis

•

Catalyst immobilization

•

Ruthenium

•

Tppts

•

Aqueous-Solution

•

Ionic Liquids

•

Fuel-Cells

•

Generation

•

Water

•

Temperature

•

Complexes

•

Conversion

•

Surfaces

•

Exchange

Note

National Licences

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCOM  
Available on Infoscience
November 13, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/44227
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