Researchers realize direct methane to acetic acid conversion under mild conditions

Sadie Harley
scientific editor

Robert Egan
associate editor

The direct conversion of methane (CH4) into high-value-added multi-carbon (C2+) oxygenates, such as acetic acid (CH3COOH), under mild conditions offers a promising way to upgrade natural gas into transportable liquid chemicals. However, achieving this transformation efficiently remains a major challenge due to strong C-H bonds in methane, the difficulty of oxygen (O2) activation, and the low selectivity of C-C coupling reactions.
In a study published in the , a research group led by Prof. Deng Dehui, Assoc. Prof. Cui Xiaoju, and Prof. Yu Liang from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences achieved the direct carbonylation of CH4 with carbon monoxide (CO) and O2 into CH3COOH under mild conditions—including room temperature.
Using a novel MoS2-confined Rh-Fe dual-site catalyst, researchers obtained an unprecedented CH3COOH selectivity of 90.3% and a productivity of 26.2 μmol gcat.–1 h–1 at just 25°C, outperforming previously reported catalytic systems.
Researchers revealed that the confined Fe sites within MoS2 activate O2 to form highly reactive Fe=O species, which can dissociate CH4 into CH3 species even at room temperature, and these CH3 species then couple with adsorbed CO on adjacent Rh sites to form the key CH3CO intermediate, leading to the formation of CH3COOH.
The unique structure of Rh–Fe sites offers synergistic catalytic properties that effectively balance C–H activation and C–C coupling, addressing the trade-off between activity and selectivity in the carbonylation of CH4 to CH3COOH under mild conditions.
"Our study opens up new avenues for designing efficient catalysts for the oxidative carbonylation of methane to acetic acid," said Prof. Deng.
More information: Jun Mao et al, Mild-Condition Conversion of Methane to Acetic Acid over MoS2–Confined Rh–Fe Sites, Journal of the American Chemical Society (2025).
Journal information: Journal of the American Chemical Society
Provided by Chinese Academy of Sciences