Abstract
The reduction of carbon dioxide is one of the hottest topics due to the concern of global warming. Carbon dioxide reduction is also an essential step for life's origins as photoautotrophs arose soon after Earth formation. Both the topics are of high general interest, and possibly, there could be a fruitful cross-fertilization of the two fields. Herein, we selected and collected papers related to photoreduction of carbon dioxide using compounds easily available on the Earth and considered of prebiotic relevance. This work might be useful also to scientists interested in carbon dioxide photoreduction and/or to have an overview of the techniques available.
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1 Introduction
Carbon dioxide photoreduction is one of the most important research fields nowadays, especially due the actual global concern on increasing greenhouse effect. In fact, very recently [1], scientists claimed to have successfully converted carbon dioxide to starch with a higher efficiency with respect to starch photosynthesis in maize.
In recent years, photochemical molecular devices were developed to fix CO2 by photochemical reaction [2,3,4,5,6,7]. In most of the reduction reactions which occur in multi-electron mode, as an electron reservoir at the photocatalytic surface (i.e., noble metals) greatly enhances the yields of conversion.
In this review, we will take into account photoreduction studies that use simple compounds easily available, plausible even in a prebiotic environment. The listed methods could be useful not only to scientists working on prebiotic chemistry, but also for the development of carbon dioxide photoreduction using simple or readily available compounds.
Plausible prebiotic photocatalysts might be minerals naturally occurring in the primordial Earth, together with compounds found in interstellar space (and other celestial bodies) or chemicals synthesized on the Earth in specific places (geothermal vents and volcanic eruptions) or due to the action of energy (lighting and solar light) on simple organic compounds. Also, more complex organic compounds such as porphyrins or other metal complexes (with easily available metals) produced in straightforward synthesis from simple organic compounds will be considered in this work.
Carbon dioxide reduction can lead to different C1 compounds and intermediates, depending on the number of electrons used in the reduction. Obviously, the transfer of a single electron at a time is easy from the practical point of view, but the single electron reduction of carbon dioxide leads to the unstable radical anion intermediate and requires very high potentials. Even so, the free energy value for the reduction corresponds to a photon in the visible-light spectrum, showing that photochemistry can play a significant role. Figure 1 shows the free energies for the reduction of carbon dioxide to the most common C1 compounds; values are calculated starting from the electrochemical reduction potentials at pH = 7 [8, 9].
As it is illustrated in Fig. 1, all the reactions are unfavorable from the free energy point of view. The reduction value, however, depends on the pH, presence/absence of water and other parameters. Less unfavorable are the reduction of carbon dioxide with hydrogen [10] as shown in the reactions below, where the last two reactions (conversion of CO2 to methanol and methane) are even thermodynamically favorable
A similar reaction is exploited by actual chemoautotrophic acetogenic bacteria [11] that could use carbon dioxide and hydrogen to sustain their metabolism and to produce biomass with a reaction that can be summarized as follows:
Hydrogen on Earth is not implausible at low levels. In fact, hydrogen can be generated by geochemical processes [12, 13], together with reduced hydrocarbons such as methane, that can be produced thanks to the reaction [14]
Other chemoautotrophs could use reduced nitrogen (NH4+, NO2−), sulfur (S2O32−, H2S), metals (Fe2+, Mn2+) or other reducing agents (CO, CH4, CH3OH) to attain the carbon dioxide reduction [15]. Also native metals like Fe, Ni and Co can promote the thermal reduction of CO2 to acetate and pyruvate [16, 17]. Iron (II), in the presence of other simple organic compounds, is able to convert, under a mild hydrothermal environment, pyruvate and glyoxylate into 9 of the 11 intermediates of the Krebs cycle [18]. In another work, the Krebs cycle was run non-enzymatically with the help of FeS and sulfate radicals [19].
However, due to the Earth composition and structure, the free energy production of chemoautotrophs could take into account only a small fraction of the conversion of CO2 into organic matter [20]. Due to the intrinsic nature of photochemistry, sunlight is the designated source to have a durable ecosystem as it occurs nowadays.
Inorganic semiconductors could have a conductive band able to reduce carbon dioxide (Fig. 2) and some of them are also compatible with a prebiotic environment. Obviously, the presence of a sufficiently high redox potential is not a guarantee of high yields of conversion. In fact, many side reactions could lead to a decrease of their activity, such as chemical instability or fast recombination of photogenerated electron–hole pairs. Some organic molecules could also be active with photoinduced electron transfer, like in the case of p-terphenyl (Fig. 2) that is chosen as comparison [21, 22].
In the current review, articles are divided into sections and discussed toward their possible prebiotic significance.
2 Metal-free organic compounds
Amines are the easiest way to think about an interaction between the acidic carbon dioxide and an organic base. It is also known that ethanolamines and derivatives [23] possess a high affinity for carbon dioxide.
However, the adsorption/desorption does not change the chemical form of carbon dioxide. Different is the case if ethanolamine is linked to titania through solvothermal process [24], where photoconversion yields of CO2 to CO increases more than 50-fold with respect to neat TiO2.
Due to the scarce reactivity of CO2 and the unique property of photons, photochemical reactions could give rise to high energy intermediates, going uphill with respect to thermal reactions. This was exploited [25] to produce an azetidine cycle from solar light irradiation of an alpha aminoketone (see Scheme 1).
The azetidine intermediate reacts with carbon dioxide giving a cyclic carbonate. Even if this reaction is not immediately prebiotic, it could give some hints on the possible importance of unstable intermediates that might be formed from the irradiation of simple compounds.
Enamides can also be photoactivated by transforming them in anion intermediates through successive photoinduced electron transfer using 1,2,3,5-tetrakis(carbazol-9-yl)-4,6-dicyano-benzene (4CzIPN) as photocatalyst, i-Pr2NEt as reductant, and Cs2CO3 as base [26]. The anion then reacts with carbon dioxide to give the corresponding carboxylic acid (Scheme 2).
Aromatic hydrocarbons are detected in meteorites, comets and interstellar space, and could be considered as pigments for light absorption and prebiotic photosynthesis [27].
Several carbon dioxide reactions with (photo) activated C(sp3)-H hydrogen are described in the literature [28]. As an interesting example, benzylic hydrogen might undergo an intermolecular hydrogen photoabstraction from an aromatic ketone. This gives rise to a diradical [29] which subsequently rearranges to the o-quinodimethane intermediate that undergoes a 4 + 2 addition with CO2 (Scheme 3).
Carbon dioxide radical anion can be generated under photoinduced single electron transfer with p-terphenyl. With the latter photocatalyst, the reduction of CO2 to formic acid (with traces of CO) was attained using triethylamine as a sacrificial donor [30] with a turnover number of 4. Starting from that idea, the unstable radical anion of carbon dioxide could be trapped to give adducts. An interesting case is the closure of the catalytic cycle with the reformation of p-terphenyl by the reaction of its radical cation with a tertiary amine. The latter is used, after the loss of a proton, to trap the incoming carbon dioxide radical anion and exploited for the preparation of alpha amino acids (Scheme 4) [31]. The reaction can be carried efficiently with a photochemical flow reactor.
3 Ferrocyanide
Ferrocyanide might be considered prebiotic and compatible with hydrogen cyanide chemistry related to nucleobase synthesis. Irradiation of ferrocyanide gives rise to a hydrated electron and the oxidation of the iron. This could lead subsequently to the formation of an insoluble precipitate of Prussian blue [32]. CO2 reduction in the aqueous medium by using ferrocyanide/TiO2 gives rise to formic acid and formaldehyde as photoproducts in nitrogen atmosphere. The yield of formation of products is increased with increasing the concentration of ferrocyanide over TiO2. Nevertheless, an n excessive concentration of ferrocyanide reverses its effect due to the formation of a multilayered ferrocyanide over TiO2 which poison the catalyst. The first product formed was formic acid and during the irradiation is converted into formaldehyde (IIustration 1).
The higher loading of ferrocyanide gave a higher yield of formaldehyde and formic acid as photo products in a shorter time. The lower loading of ferrocyanide gave instead the maximum yield of formic acid with longer exposure time. Also, the particle size affects the reaction yield: a higher amounts of photoproducts was obtained with smaller particles [33].
4 Porphyrins and other nitrogen containing metal complexes
Porphyrins are widely represented in actual organisms and are considered prebiotically plausible photosensitizers [34,35,36,37,38].
Their synthesis is straightforward, and it is compatible with prebiotic environments [39]. Vesicles could be used as microreactors to drive a chemical evolution. Moreover, their synthesis could require formaldehyde [40], that is achievable through the reduction of carbon dioxide.
In this aspect, Fe is the metal center compared to the other elements in his family group elements also for its availability on the planet.
Photogenerated iron(0) tetraaryl porphyrin [41] can perform the photocatalytic reduction reaction under irradiation at λ > 280 nm.
The photoreduction of CO2 is enhanced by the addition of a sacrificial electron donor (Et3N). The electron donor is also useful for the reduction of iron (III) to iron(0), that is the active species. The reaction has a good catalytic activity and selectivity toward the formation of CO. Hydrogen is also observed as a subproduct due to the interaction of Et3NH+ with iron (II) porphyrin [42]. At longer irradiation time, the porphyrin ring could undergo inactivation due to hydrogenation. Porphyrins are well studied and their modifications to improve the efficiency is a hot topic [43].
An interesting modification is the addition of a molecular "arm" lying over the metal center, giving the so-called hangman porphyrins. These classes of porphyrins possess an enhanced electrocatalytic conversion of CO2 [44].
Copper(II) imidazolate frameworks are interesting photocatalysts prepared easily by reaction of imidazole with a copper (II) salt in the presence of a base and subsequently submitted to a mild heating. Different treatments give rise to frameworks having different band gaps. [45]. These photocatalysts can reduce carbon dioxide to methanol by irradiation with visible light [46]. The highest yield of methanol formation was 1712.7 µmol/g obtained by irradiating the solution with a filtered (> 400 nm) 500 W Xe lamp. Authors discuss this result comparing the structure of the catalyst with the boron carbide (C3N4) polymer (Illustration 2).
5 Oxide semiconductors
A diversity of semiconductors such as TiO2, ZnO, CdS and In2O3, have been widely used as photocatalysts for the conversion of CO2 in past decades [47].
The redox reaction mechanism looks straightforward at a first glance:
However, since a semiconductor can give only one electron for each photon absorbed, we must consider the formation of unstable intermediates having an odd number of electrons.
Shkrob [12] suggested the formation of two carbon intermediates like glyoxal and glycolaldehyde, which could be detected as byproducts. Surprisingly or not, these two compounds are of prebiotic interest (and biological interest).
Among all the semiconductors, TiO2 has been extensively used widely due to its higher stability, reduced toxicity, and low costs [48,49,50]. When compared to pristine TiO2, functionalized TiO2 with ethanolamine groups is more effective in the chemisorption of CO2 molecules. Ethanolamine moieties on the TiO2 surface have the double role of increasing the local concentration of carbon dioxide molecules chemisorbed as carbamate and lowering the reduction potential [24]. With this catalyst, carbon dioxide is converted into methane and carbon monoxide.
Other than TiO2, some more photocatalysts play a walk-on part in the reduction of CO2.
As an example, CeO2, an n-type semiconductor having a wide band gap, could be useful to fabricate heterojunction semiconducting materials. A heterojunction with Co3O4 enhances the efficacy of visible-light absorption by shrinking the band gap in which that p–n junction can smartly work in the reduction of CO2 in a nicer way because of the conduction band potential is more positive. The combined photocatalyst possesses a reduced band-gap value of 2.07 eV. Co3O4/CeO2 acts as a photoreducing catalyst in the reduction of CO2 to methanol and ethanol with improved photocatalytic activity [51].
Also, Cu2O can create a heterojunction with CeO2 giving higher stability, non-toxicity, and wide band gap [52].
Cu2O could be efficiently coupled also with hematite producing a photocatalyst active in the visible-light spectrum for the reduction of CO2 to CO in the gas phase [53].
6 Sulfides
Elemental sulfur and metal sulfides are of great interest as potential prebiotic photocatalysts for the reductive conversion of CO2 to potentially prebiotic important intermediate, such as formate and formaldehyde, due to their abundance in the Primordial Earth and their photocatalytic activities (Illustration 3).
The metal linked to the sulfide—usually a heavy metal—can coordinate carbonate or bicarbonate, but usually not free CO2, driving its reduction, so that the reaction takes part better in a neutral or only weakly acidic environment [54].
Carbonates and bicarbonates interact specifically with some crystallographic structures of the particles of the catalyst, so that the physical form of the catalyst itself has a great influence on the reduction efficiency. Bulk materials are in most cases inactive for photocatalytic conversions, but nanostructured material may lead to significant improvement of photocatalytic performance, due to the fine tuning of the band gap and to kinetic factors such as suppression of electron/hole pair recombination and a larger catalytically active surface area [55]. Colloidal materials, that are nanostructures and could be found in primordial waters [56], are particularly efficient at this regard [57].
Semiconductor minerals such as heavy metal sulfides may be exceptionally active C(+ IV) to C(+ II) photocatalysts, even at reduced temperatures. Their photoreducing ability is due to the conduction band electrons formed during ultraviolet (UV) irradiation. When a photon with an energy exceeding the band gap is absorbed, an electron from the valence band is excited into the conduction band, while a hole remains in the valence band. Semiconductors having a conduction band that is poised at a sufficiently negative voltage are thermodynamically capable of reducing carbon dioxide [58].
Different metal catalysts result in differences in the activity and selectivity of the CO2 because of the differences in the adsorption strength of the intermediates.
Basing to the selectivity for final products, according to literature [59], the metal catalysts can be classified into four categories:
-
(1)
Cd, Hg, Sn, In, Bi, Pb, Pd, etc., which easily produce HCOO intermediate, and lead to formate as the main product.
-
(2)
Au, Ag, Zn, etc., that due to the weak CO adsorption capacity, produce CO as main product.
-
(3)
Ni, Fe, Si, V, Pt, etc., mainly able to produce H2 due to the low hydrogen evolution potential.
-
(4)
Cu that, under different conditions, can produce up to 16 different carbon-containing compounds.
Moreover, mixed metal catalysts having multiple binding sites for intermediate species will have a great influence on the performance of the catalyst.
Sulfur atoms greatly contribute to the reduction reaction, due to the intrinsic characteristic of this element. For example, S has small electronegativity, strongly coordinates with the metal elements, and has the capacity to bond with itself to form a chain-shaped polysulfide ion, namely Sn2−. Due to the various bonding modes of S atoms, the structure of sulfides tends to be diversified and complicated, which means that S is a versatile candidate as a modifier for electrocatalyst fields. The S atom can effectively suppress the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), which occurs as a competitive reaction and significantly influences the absorption and desorption strength of CO2 reduction intermediates [59]. Moreover, sulfur accelerates CO2 reduction by a unique mechanism, as it can also enhance the activation of water, forming hydrogen species that can readily react with CO2 to produce formate [60].
Elemental sulfur (S0) has been investigated as a potential photocatalyst for CO2 reduction, also considering that in modern and ancient volcanic hydrothermal systems on the surface of Earth, it is a quite abundant element. As a typical nonmetallic semiconducting element, S0 can photo-reduce CO2into formic acid under ultraviolet (UV) light below 280 nm. The semiconducting S is indicated to have a direct band gap of 4.4 eV. The UV-excited S0 produces photoelectrons with a highly negative potential of − 2.34 V (versus NHE, pH 7), which could reduce CO2 after accepting electrons from electron donors such as reducing sulfur species. Simultaneously, UV light breaks sulfur bonds, allowing the adsorption of charged carbonates onto S0 and assisting their photoreduction. Assuming that terrestrial hot springs covered 1% of primitive Earth’s surface, S could have produced up to 109 kg/year HCOOH within 10-cm-thick photic zones, underlying its remarkable contributions to the accumulation of prebiotic biomolecules [61].
Of the common sulfide-based semiconductors, ZnS and MnS have the important property that their conduction bands are placed at highly reducing positions, respectively, of -1.04 and -1.19 V versus the NHE (normal hydrogen electrode).
The large overpotential for carbon fixation by ZnS and MnS leads to high photoreaction rates. The difference in band gap between ZnS (3.6 eV, 344 nm) and MnS (3.0 eV, 413 nm) suggests that MnS may use the solar spectrum more efficiently.
At this regard, photoreduction of C(+ IV) as bicarbonate was used as a probe to investigate the photoelectrochemical properties of alabandite (MnS) colloidal particles, that is found in epithermal sulfide vein deposits and in anoxic laminated sediments. Photoreduction occurs and formate is the initial photoproduct. A quantum efficiency of 4.2% is obtained (pH 7.5). The quantum efficiency is temperature-independent from 298 to 328 K. In addition to formate, longer chain carbon products such as acetate and propionate are also produced, although to a lesser extent. Longer chain organic molecules that contain oxygenated functional groups were also identified, although these data can be disputed. These results suggest that some prebiotic syntheses could have occurred via photoelectrochemical reactions on semiconducting minerals [58].
Mixed molybdenum sulfides catalysts were also realized. In particular, n-type Bi2S3 nanorods were wrapped with two-dimensional (2D) p-type MoS2 sheets, which have good light absorption properties.
The designed p–n junction Bi2S3/MoS2 composite exhibited enhanced light absorption over the entire wavelength range, and higher carbon dioxide adsorption capacity and photocurrent density compared to the single catalysts. Consequently, the activity of the 1:1 Bi2S3/MoS2 composite catalyst for the photocatalytic reduction of carbon dioxide was more than 20 times higher than that of the single catalysts under visible-light irradiation at ≤ 400 nm, with partial selectivity for CO conversion. This is attributed to the p–n heterojunction: the high light absorption of n-Bi2S3 accelerated electron excitation, and the electron affinity of the 2D sheet p-MoS2, which quickly absorbed excited electrons, resulted in effective charge separation. This ultimately improved the catalytic performance by continuously supplying catalytically active sites to the heterojunction interfaces [62].
Regarding ZnS, freshly prepared colloidal suspensions effectively catalyze the photoreduction of CO2 in water at pH 7 with NaH2PO2 in the coexistence of Na2S under UV irradiation. With competitive H2 evolution, formate and a very small quantity of CO were formed with the apparent quantum yield ɸ = 0.24 at 313 nm, where H2PO2− was quantitatively photooxidized to HPO32−. The efficiency strongly depends on the pH of the system, the preparation methods of ZnS photocatalysts, and synergistic effects of electron donors. Quantized ZnS crystallites with low density of surface defects are indispensable for the effective CO2 reduction. The synergistic effect in the use of both SH− and H2PO2− ions is essential for the reaction to take place [57, 63].
Aqueous solutions of CO2 containing tetramethylammonium chloride photolysed with visible light in the presence of colloidal ZnS yielded tartaric acid, glyoxylic acid, oxalic acid, formic acid, and formaldehyde [64], showing that the presence of an amine-modified catalyst can lead to a wide range of different prebiotically interesting compounds.
Zinc sulfide was also modified by Ru, Cd, or as a microcrystallite, or supported on SiO2, always observing formate formation [65]. The use of the modifier stabilizes the catalyst, improves its light absorption efficiency, and modulates the band gap.
Highly selective photoelectrochemical CO2 reduction to formate (> 80% selectivity) in water was successfully achieved by combining Cu2ZnSnS4 (CZTS) with a metal-complex electrocatalyst. CZTS, a sulfide semiconductor that possesses a narrow band gap and consists of earth-abundant elements, is demonstrated to be a candidate photoabsorber for a CO2 reduction hybrid photocatalyst [66]. This shows that the electron donor can be either a compound present in solution, or an electrode surface, showing that the most critical element is not the oxidizable substrate but more commonly the catalyst itself, as different oxidizable substrates can be used without loss of efficiency.
Speaking of sulfides different from that Mn or Zn based, the photocatalytic reduction of carbon dioxide on CdS particles with and without surface modification by several kinds of thiol compounds was investigated in various solvents. Formate and carbon monoxide were obtained as the major reduction products, and the ratio of the former to the latter was largely influenced by the solvents when naked cadmium sulfide was used as the photocatalyst, and by increasing the dielectric constant of the solvent, the ratio increased. Even if CdS particles were modified by thiol compounds, the effect of the solvent was not eventually altered, but the ratio of formate to carbon monoxide became greater by increasing the surface modification of CdS. The observed effect of the surface modification of CdS is interpreted in terms of involvement of Cd sites adjacent to surface vacancies of CdS photocatalysts in adsorption of anion radicals of CO2 [67].
As a photocatalyst active for the CO2 conversion, CdS can also do its work when used as an electrocatalyst [57, 63, 68]. We report therein the literature’s results obtained by the use of some potentially prebiotic metal sulfides as electrocatalyst for the CO2 reduction, as they can be potentially active as photocatalysts [69, 70], although careful experimental conditions tuning must be performed and discordant results can be obtained when shifting from electrocatalysis to photocatalysis and vice versa [71]. A study by Kitadai et al. using various single-metal sulfides (Ag2S, CdS, CoS, CuS, FeS, MnS, MoS2, NiS, PbS, WS2, and ZnS) demonstrated that CdS and Ag2S function as excellent CO production catalysts [72]. Among the results reported in the literature, these concerning iron sulfides, however, are of particular interest due to their abundance in the primordial environment.
The mineral greigite, found in the chimney cavities of hydrothermal vent, presents similar surface structures to the active sites found in many modern-day enzymes. Electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to CO and CH4 on greigite (Fe3S4) under simulated alkaline hydrothermal vent conditions was described. As CO2 reduction will not proceed without overcoming the high energetic barrier associated with the first electron uptake step (− 1.9 V vs. the standard hydrogen electrode, SHE at pH 7) and also competes with the thermodynamically and kinetically more favorable reduction of protons to H2, the Faraday efficiency for CO production is low (< 0.02% in total at − 1.3 V vs. SHE) at pH 5.5. However, by doping FeS with Ni to form FeNi2S4 (violarite), the CO2 electroreduction selectivity is enhanced by ~ 85-fold concurrently with a lowered onset potential (− 0.5 V vs. SHE, pH 5.5) into a series of C1–C3 compounds, including formic acid, acetic acid, methanol, and pyruvic acid. [72]
Another study showed that particles of greigite can reduce CO2 under ambient conditions into chemicals such as methanol, formic, acetic, and pyruvic acid, supporting the Origin of Life theory on alkaline hydrothermal vents [54].
By careful adjustment of the process conditions, another mixed Fe/Ni sulfide, pentlandite (Fe4.5Ni4.5S8), in addition to HER, also support the CO2 electroreduction, reaching a peak faradaic efficiency of 87% and 13% for the formation of CO and methane. The choice of solvent, the presence of water/protons, and CO2 solubility are identified as key properties to adjust the balance between HER and CO2 reduction in favor of the latter. [54]
Also, copper sulfide, as a low-toxicity and emerging material, has broad prospects in the field of CO2 reduction due to its unique structural and electrochemical properties. Depending on the catalyst stoichiometric composition, its shape and morphology, and the experimental conditions, different products can be obtained, such as methane, formate, or CO. Concurrent hydrogen evolution can be partially suppressed by choosing the working conditions, thus maximizing CO2 reduction [59].
More exotic devices, such as sulfur-doped indium surfaces are able to convert CO2 in formate [60] and a new class of material, that of Ge–S-In chalcogenide glass, can produce formate starting from CO2 [73].
All these results showed that the photoreduction of CO2 in a primordial environment rich of colloidal sulfur and metal sulfides is far from being a remote hypothesis, although its real contribution to the formation of prebiotic molecules is a matter of debate [74].
7 Sulfites
Carbon dioxide can be reduced through sulfite photochemistry. Investigations of Hadean (≈4600–4000 Ma) zircons [75] revealed that Earth at that time had an oxidizing mantle, with an important release of sulfur dioxide in the atmosphere. This resulted in the production of sulfite and bisulfite upon contact with fluvial or oceanic water bodies. In an oxygen lacking atmosphere, compatible with the prebiotic Hadean one, sulfite could be stored through precipitation and formation of minerals such as hannebachite, (CaSO3)0.1/2 H2O [76]. These data suggest therefore a prebiotic geochemical and atmospheric scenario that in the pre-biological era supplied the environment with sulfite and bisulfite based chemical species. Sulfite ion SO32− can undergo photo-detachment of an electron [77], which is released in the solution in the solvated form (Scheme 5) [78]. The oxidation of sulfite involves the formation of SO3.− 1 (Scheme 5), according to the UV light-driven reaction SO32− → SO32− + e(aq)− (Illustartion 4). Neta and co-workers [79] demonstrated that for the redox couple SO32−/ SO3.−, the reduction potential vs NHE are 0.73 V at pH > 11, 0.75 V at pH 7, 0.92 V at pH 4, and 1.05 V at pH 2. Sulfite ion has thus the potential to act like a reductant by exploiting its photochemical characteristics. Similarly, CO2 can also undergo reduction through the addition of a solvated electron to give CO2.− 2, according to the reaction CO2 + e(aq)− → CO2.−. Janik and Tripathi investigated the nature of radical anion CO2.− using pulse radiolysis time-resolved Raman spectroscopy [80]. Starting from DFT calculation and the experimentally obtained data, it was found that 2 belongs to the C2v point group, with a OCO bond angle of about 130° and the unpaired electron located on the central carbon atom. This radical anion exists as the [(.CO2).(H2O)4]− hydrated cluster, with a calculated hydration energy of about 1.5 eV. Moreover, Roughton and Booth [81] demonstrated that oxyanions such as sulfite can catalyze the dissociation process H2CO3 → CO2 + H2O, increasing the CO2 abundance in water. These theoretical and experimental data demonstrate that sulfite has the potential to reduce carbon dioxide in aqueous solution [82].
Recently, Sutherland, Sasselov, and co-workers [83] have investigated this approach to the carbon dioxide photochemical reduction. Starting from a solution of NaHSO3 and NaHCO3, they were able to produce a complex mixture of organic chemical compounds. Most of them corresponded or were similar to the carboxylic acids observed in extant metabolic cycles found in nature (Scheme 5).
These products can be formed through a complex network of reactions. In the simplest possible step, carbon dioxide is converted into CO2.−, which then undergoes a hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) in the presence of SO32−, UV photons, and water to give formate 3. However, further reduction of formate is slow and reversible, so that radical anions 2 can combine to give oxalate 5. Oxalate 5 is reduced much faster than formate [83], and this process promotes the formation of products containing up to six carbon atoms. The proposed pathway by which complex carboxylic acids can be produced involves solvated aqueous electrons, sulfite anion radical, and other species derived from CO2.− 2 (Scheme 6).
The key steps are the reduction of oxalate 5 and the formation of glyoxylate 17, from which tartronate 9 is derived, providing eventually malonate 8. Carbon dioxide sulfite-mediated reduction shows a characteristic product distribution time lapse: reduction of CO2 furnishes an initial high concentration of formate, but when the formation and subsequent reduction of oxalate takes over, glycolate 6 and tartronate 9 are the major products. Further UV irradiation provides for the build-up of malonate 8 which is eventually the most abundant product: this carboxysulfitic chemistry yields thus malonate 8 in a converging manner, although in the reaction network, several equilibria are still present. This carbon dioxide fixation pathway leads to the formation of C2–C4 products even if the sulfite supply in the reaction mixture is reduced, thus supporting a realistic geochemical prebiotic environment in which eventual deposits of sulfite salts would not have been uniformly distributed on the soil and both fluvial and oceanic water bodies.
Furthermore, carbon dioxide reduction products were obtained using an UV light source similar to the wavelengths solar spectrum present on Hadean Earth [84], making again the sulfite a plausible prebiotic reducing agent toward CO2. Apart from this, sulfite does not act as a mere stoichiometric reductant, because it leads to the formation of molecules such as oxalate 5, mesoxalate 10, and glyoxylate 17 that undergo Norrish type—I reactions providing the system of radical anions 2. In this way, further molecules can be produced starting from the first ones.
Particularly interesting is the photochemistry elucidated from Sutherland and co-workers that is based on the glycolate previously obtained from CO2 through sulfite oxidation [83]. Irradiation of glycolate with both 254 nm UV light and Hadean Sun—like UV source resulted in the formation of malate 12, succinate 13, and citrate 14 (Scheme 7).
In these chemical steps, glycolate acts as a C2 unit through the key tartrate intermediate 11, which upon reduction and combination with radical 21, provides citrate 14 after two sulfite-mediated reductions. Reductive loss of hydroxide ion through SET-mediated oxidation of sulfite yields carboxymethyl radical 20 by which both malate 12 and succinate 13 are obtained.
Further investigations conducted on this chemistry by Sutherland and co-workers have shown that the glycolate-based aforementioned pathway is not affected by the presence of nitrogen compounds [83]: this expands the set of prebiotic compounds chemically compatible and non-interfering with these transformations. Since succinate, malate, and citrate together with oxalate are key intermediates in the Krebs cycle, sulfite-mediated photochemical CO2 reduction could have provided primordial synthetic mechanisms starting from which extant metabolic cycles developed. Tartrate 11 eventually may also be a source of glycolaldehyde. Its possible dehydration to give oxaloacetate and oxidation to dihydroxy fumarate, that spontaneously loses two molecules of carbon dioxide, could provide glycolaldehyde [83, 85]. The possible conversion of tartrate to formaldehyde could represent an interesting connection between carboxylic acids and carbohydrates prebiotic chemistry. Furthermore, bisulfite, which is present (despite in little amounts) in aqueous solutions of sulfite, reacts with formaldehyde to give hydroxymethanesulfonate (HMS), which precipitates and forms crystals when is concentrated in aqueous solutions [84]. This mechanism is thought to have played an important role in formaldehyde and other small carbohydrates sequestration and concentration, supporting the primordial carbohydrate chemistry [76]. Ritson et al. [84] demonstrated that aldehyde adducts of bisulfite can lead to the formation of relevant prebiotic heterocycles, and that sulfonates could have been fundamental for protection of these molecules in the Hadean eon. In summary, it becomes apparent that sulfite through the combination of carboxysulfitic and bisulfite adducts chemistry could have really been a major player in the carbon dioxide reductive fixation and subsequent synthesis of carboxylic acid and carbohydrates from a prebiotic point of view.
8 Conclusions and outlook
Carbon dioxide is the endpoint of combustion of carbon-containing compounds and an unwanted product causing the greenhouse effect. However, carbon dioxide is also a big deal for photoautotrophs to kick off and maintain life on the Earth. If complex life forms exist on Earth, it is due to the solar light harvesting of these organisms. Therefore, an important and essential step in the origins of life is the photoreduction of carbon dioxide. This coincides with the actual efforts in the carbon dioxide reduction processes. Prebiotic conditions are synonymous to simple compounds readily available on Earth. Possibly, this is equivalent to choosing the simplest methodologies found in the literature for the CO2 photoreduction. Hopefully this collection of works might be of inspiration for both areas. With a look to the future and parallelly to what happened in biology, scientists could achieve an artificial chemical evolution toward the goal to obtain clues for life’s origin and/or to obtain more performant photocatalysts.
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Vadivel, D., Ferraro, F., Merli, D. et al. Carbon dioxide photoreduction in prebiotic environments. Photochem Photobiol Sci 21, 863–878 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s43630-021-00168-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s43630-021-00168-x