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Natural gas, an abundant natural energy and chemical resource, is
underutilized. Its inherent high energy content is compromised by
its volatility. Storage and transportation problems abound for
liquified natural gas. Several of the drawbacks of the utilization
of natural gas, particularly its high volatility, could be offset
by development of an economical and efficient process for coupling
and/or further homologation of its principal component, methane.
Alternatively, other conversion strategies such as partial
oxidation to methanol and syngas, to oxygenates or conversion to
such products via the intermediacy of chlorides should also be
considered. Given the energy-intensive regimes necessary for the
likely activation of methane, it was inevitable that researchers
would tum to the use of heterogeneous catalysts. Heterogeneous
catalysis is now a relatively mature discipline with numerous and
diverse reactions being explored alongside informative studies on
surface characterization, mechanism, and theory. Relationships to
important related areas such as homogeneous catalysis,
organometallic chemistry, and inorganic chemistry have become
firmly established within this discipline. The field of methane and
alkane activation is now over ten years old. The first decade of
investigation produced results plagued by low yields and
low-moderate conversions with well-articulated mechanistic
limitations. As we begin the second decade of inquiry, novel
strategies have brought increasing yields and conversions to such
products as ethane, ethylene, methanol, and formaldehyde. These new
approaches utilize separation of products via membranes or
adsorbents. Moreover, additional mechanistic insight has been
forthcoming from theoretical and computational examination as well
as experimental investigation.
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