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Selectivity control in hydrogenation through adaptive catalysis using ruthenium nanoparticles on a CO2-responsive support

Alexis Bordet, Sami El Sayed, Matthew Sanger, Kyle J. Boniface, Deepti Kalsi, Kylie L. Luska, Philip G. Jessop, Walter Leitner

2021Nature Chemistry72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract With the advent of renewable carbon resources, multifunctional catalysts are becoming essential to hydrogenate selectively biomass-derived substrates and intermediates. However, the development of adaptive catalytic systems, that is, with reversibly adjustable reactivity, able to cope with the intermittence of renewable resources remains a challenge. Here, we report the preparation of a catalytic system designed to respond adaptively to feed gas composition in hydrogenation reactions. Ruthenium nanoparticles immobilized on amine-functionalized polymer-grafted silica act as active and stable catalysts for the hydrogenation of biomass-derived furfural acetone and related substrates. Hydrogenation of the carbonyl group is selectively switched on or off if pure H 2 or a H 2 /CO 2 mixture is used, respectively. The formation of alkylammonium formate species by the catalytic reaction of CO 2 and H 2 at the amine-functionalized support has been identified as the most likely molecular trigger for the selectivity switch. As this reaction is fully reversible, the catalyst performance responds almost in real time to the feed gas composition.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryRutheniumFurfuralCatalysisSelectivityAmine gas treatingNanoparticleFormateReactivity (psychology)AcetoneCombinatorial chemistrySynergistic catalysisOrganic chemistryChemical engineeringEngineeringAlternative medicineMedicinePathologyCatalysis for Biomass ConversionCatalysis and Hydrodesulfurization StudiesCarbon dioxide utilization in catalysis
Selectivity control in hydrogenation through adaptive catalysis using ruthenium nanoparticles on a CO2-responsive support | Litcius