Natural gas is mostly methane, but it also contains significant amounts of ethane and propane. Those three hydrocarbons are raw materials for easily transportable liquid commodities such as methanol. A key step in making those compounds is to break a strong carbon–hydrogen bond and attach an oxygen atom to the carbon. Current processes require high temperatures (up to 900 °C) that lead to low reaction efficiencies and high carbon dioxide emissions. For decades now, chemists have worked to enable oxygenation at lower temperatures, mostly using scarce and expensive precious metals such as platinum or palladium. Now scientists from the Scripps Research Institute and Brigham Young University, led by Roy Periana, have discovered that salts of abundant elements like thallium and lead can activate and oxygenate C–H bonds of methane, ethane, and propane. The work could be the first step toward an inexpensive and practical conversion of natural gas into other...
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1 May 2014
May 01 2014
Citation
Steven K. Blau; Liquid chemicals and fuels from natural gas. Physics Today 1 May 2014; 67 (5): 17. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.2374
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