July 14, 2022

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

Researchers develop novel Au catalyst for hydroformylation

Structural modeling and performance comparison of Au-based catalysts. Credit: SARI
× close
Structural modeling and performance comparison of Au-based catalysts. Credit: SARI

As one of the largest-volume industrial chemical processes today, hydroformylation converts olefins, H2 and CO into aldehydes and related products more than 10 million tons annually.

Although Au exhibits good ability towards olefins activation, H2 dissociation and CO bonding, it is conventionally considered inactive for hydroformylation due to its intrinsic inertness.

Now, a research team led by Profs. Wang Hui and Sun Yuhan from the Shanghai Advanced Research Institute (SARI) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences designed a zeolite-encaged Au single-atom catalyst with Au1-O-SiOX motifs, which shows remarkable catalytic activity and selectivity towards propene hydroformylation.

The study was published in Chem Catalysis on July 13.

Preliminary performance evaluation of impregnated Au on zeolite demonstrates that sub-nanometer Au clusters exhibit higher activity than in hydroformylation. Inspired by this, the confinement effect of zeolite is utilized to regulate the particle size of Au. Nanoparticles/sub-nanoclusters and atomically dispersed Au species within zeolite can be unambiguously observed through high-angle annular dark-field scanning (HAADF-STEM).

The Au1@S-1 catalyst shows a total 3,794 μmol butyraldehyde and noticeable stability after five cycles, which is about one order of magnitude more active than Au nanoparticles and is even comparable to Rh-based catalysts.

Detailed characterizations and indicate that the isolated Au atoms within the matrix are stabilized via oxygen bridge bonds. The formed Au1-O-SiOX motifs render maximum active site density and high structural stability, which are identified as the real active sites for efficient hydroformylation.

This work makes conventionally inactive Au an efficient alternative for hydroformylation by reasonably tailoring the size, contact structure and electronic environment of active metals on specific reactions.

More information: Baiyin Wei et al, Single-atom gold species within zeolite for efficient hydroformylation, Chem Catalysis (2022). DOI: 10.1016/j.checat.2022.06.008

Load comments (0)