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Abstract Selective hydrogenation of carbon monoxide (CO) to higher alcohols (C 2+ OH) is a promising non-petroleum route for producing high-value chemicals, in which precise regulations of both C-O cleavage and C-C coupling are highly essential but remain great challenges. Herein, we report that highly selective CO hydrogenation to C 2-4 OH is achieved over a potassium-modified edge-rich molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ) catalyst, which delivers a high CO conversion of 17% with a superior C 2-4 OH selectivity of 45.2% in hydrogenated products at 240 °C and 50 bar, outperforming previously reported non-noble metal-based catalysts under similar conditions. By regulating the relative abundance of edge to basal plane, C 2-4 OH to methanol selectivity ratio can be overturned from 0.4 to 2.2. Mechanistic studies reveal that sulfur vacancies at MoS 2 edges boost carbon-chain growth by facilitating not only C-O cleavage but also C-C coupling, while potassium promotes the desorption of alcohols via electrostatic interaction with hydroxyls, thereby enabling preferential formation of C 2-4 OH.
Hu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.