Elucidating structure-property relationships in the design of metal nanoparticle catalysts for the activation of molecular oxygen

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Abstract

A novel synthetic strategy for the design of metal nanoparticles by extrusion of anionic chloride precursors from a porous copper chlorophosphate framework has been devised for the sustainable aerobic oxidation of vanillyl alcohol (4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzyl alcohol) to vanillin (4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzaldehyde) using a one-step, base-free method. The precise nature of the Au, Pt, and Pd species has been elucidated for the as-synthesized and thermally activated analogues, which exhibit fascinating catalytic properties when subjected to diverse activation environments. By employing a combination of structural and spectroscopic characterization tools, it has been shown that analogous heat treatments have differing effects on extrusion of a particular metal species. The most active catalysts in this series of materials were the extruded Pt nanoparticles that were generated by reduction in H 2, which exhibit enhanced catalytic behavior, when compared to its Au or Pd counterparts, for industrially significant, aerobic oxidation reactions.

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Hinde, C. S., Ansovini, D., Wells, P. P., Collins, G., Aswegen, S. V., Holmes, J. D., … Raja, R. (2015). Elucidating structure-property relationships in the design of metal nanoparticle catalysts for the activation of molecular oxygen. ACS Catalysis, 5(6), 3807–3816. https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.5b00481

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