Embedding Hierarchical Pores by Mechanochemistry in Carbonates with Superior Chemoselective Catalysis and Stability
Bingzhen Zhang, Yahui Zhu, Shunli Shi, Ying Li, Yanping Luo, Zhixin Huang, Weiming Xiao, Shuhua Wang, Pengfei Zhang, Shu Yuan, Chao Chen
Abstract
Hierarchical porosity of carbonates can facilitate their performance in massive applications as compared to their corresponding bulk samples. Traditional solution-based precipitation is typically utilized to fabricate porous carbonates. However, this tactic is generally employed under humid conditions, which demand soluble metal precursors, solvents, and extended dry periods. A salt-assisted mechanochemistry is exploited in contemporary work to settle the shortcomings. Enlighted by solid-state technology, this approach eliminates the utilization of solvents, and the process of ball milling can create pores in 5 min. A range of highly porous carbonates and their derivatives are acquired, with several materials surpassing recording surface areas (e.g., H-CaCO 3: 108 m 2 /g, SrCO 3: 125 m 2 /g, BaCO 3: 172 m 2 /g, Pd/H-CaCO 3 catalyst: 101 m 2 /g). The results display that Pd/H-CaCO 3 shows superior catalytic efficiency in the synthesis of aniline (turnover frequency [TON] = 1.33 × 10 4 /h –1, yield ≥ 99%, and recycle stability: 11 cycles) and dye degradation. Combining mechanochemistry and salt-assisted tactic provides a facile and efficient pathway for processing porous materials.