Synthesis of ethane from CO2 by a methyl transferase-inspired molecular catalyst

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Jan 14;122(2):e2417764122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2417764122. Epub 2025 Jan 7.

Abstract

Molecular catalysts with a single metal center are reported to reduce CO2 to a wide range of valuable single-carbon products like CO, HCOOH, CH3OH, etc. However, these catalysts cannot reduce CO2 to two carbon products like ethane or ethylene and the ability to form C-C from CO2 remains mostly limited to heterogeneous material-based catalysts. We report a set of simple iron porphyrins with pendant thiol group can catalyze the reduction of CO2 to ethane (C2H6) with H2O as the proton source with a Faradaic yield >40% the rest being CO. The mechanism involves a CO2-derived methyl group transfer to the pendant thiol akin to the proposal forwarded for methyl transferases and a follow-up C-C bond formation of the thioether thus formed and a Fe(II)-CH3 species generated by the reduction of a second molecule of CO2. The availability of a "parking space" in the molecular framework for the first reduced C1 product from CO2 reduction allows C-C bond formation resulting in a unique case where a component of natural gas can be generated from direct electrochemical reduction of CO2.

Keywords: CO2 reduction; ethane synthesis; iron porphyrin.