96-26-4Relevant articles and documents
Earth-abundant manganese oxide nanoneedle as highly efficient electrocatalyst for selective glycerol electro-oxidation to dihydroxyacetone
Chiang, Chia-Ying,Tran, Giang-Son,Vo, Truong-Giang
, p. 139 - 148 (2021/10/07)
In this study, earth-abundant manganese oxide (MnO2) was used as a catalyst for the electrocatalytic glycerol oxidation with a satisfactory yield and high selectivity under mild pH media; that is, the high current density of 6.0 mA cm?2 and selectivity of ca. 46% for dihydroxyacetone (DHA). MnO2 also exhibited reasonable durability without considerable changes for 3 h. More importantly, by combination of operando Raman and electrochemical studies, a tentative reaction pathway was also proposed. It is found that high selectivity of formic acid at low potential was due to predominant coverage of α-MnO2 on catalyst surface. Meanwhile, at high applied potential, partial transformation of α-MnO2 to δ-MnO2 causes decreasing C-C bond cleavage, leading to high DHA selectivity. The results of this work not only demonstrate that MnO2 holds promise as an efficient electrocatalyst for selectively producing DHA but also provides realistic details on electrochemically generated species under working condition.
Selective catalytic oxidation of diglycerol
Wang, Huan,Vu, Nam Duc,Chen, Guo-Rong,Métay, Estelle,Duguet, Nicolas,Lemaire, Marc
, p. 1154 - 1159 (2021/02/26)
The selective oxidation of α,α-diglycerol was studied using oxygen as a clean oxidant in the presence of a palladium/neocuproine complex. After optimization of the reaction parameters, the mono-oxidation product was obtained with 93% NMR yield (up to 76% isolated yield). The product was named “diglycerose” considering that it mainly exists as a cyclic hemi-ketal form.
Design of a synthetic enzyme cascade for the: In vitro fixation of a C1carbon source to a functional C4sugar
Güner, Samed,Pick, André,Sieber, Volker,Wegat, Vanessa
supporting information, p. 6583 - 6590 (2021/09/10)
Realizing a sustainable future requires intensifying the waste stream conversion, such as converting the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide into value-added products. In this paper, we focus on utilizing formaldehyde as a C1 carbon source for enzymatic C-C bond formation. Formaldehyde can be sustainably derived from other C1 feedstocks, and in this work, we designed a synthetic enzyme cascade for producing the functional C4 sugar erythrulose. This involved tailoring the enzyme formolase, which was optimized for fusing formaldehyde, from a three-carbon producer (dihydroxyacetone) to sets of variants with enhanced two-carbon (glycolaldehyde) or four-carbon (erythrulose) activity. To achieve this, a high-throughput combinatorial screening was developed, and every single variant was evaluated in terms of glycolaldehyde, dihydroxyacetone and erythrulose activity. By applying the two most promising variants in an enzyme cascade, we were able to show for the first time production of ERY starting from a C1 carbon source. In addition, we demonstrated that one of our tailored formolase variants was able to convert 25.0 g L-1 glycolaldehyde to 24.6 g L-1 erythrulose (98% theoretical yield) in a fully atom-economic biocatalytic process. This represents the highest achieved in vitro concentration of erythrulose to date.