Nature inspires greener generation of metal hydrides to make formic acid from CO2

Formic acid

The iron–sulfur cluster catalyses the electrocatalytic formation of manganese hydrides

An electrocatalytic method has been developed that can generate metal hydrides more cleanly and efficiently. The researchers then used the hydrides to reduce carbon dioxide to formic acid, a high value-added commodity chemical.

‘We were inspired by the efficiency of enzymes,’ explains Victor Mougel from ETH Zurich in Switzerland, who led the study. In nature, many different enzymes catalyse proton-electron transfers, the type of reactions that yield hydrides. ‘In particular, an iron–iron hydrogenase that follows a concerted mechanism … it transfers both a proton and an electron together … to generate the metal hydride,’ he says. And it works thanks to one of the most common catalytic cores in living organisms – the iron–sulfur cubic cluster. Mougel’s team maintained this motif as a mediator.