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How to control selectivity in alkane oxidation?

The well-defined particle morphology of crystalline MnWO(4) catalysts investigated in the present study facilitates obtaining insight into the origin of selectivity limitations in alkane oxidation. Hydrothermal synthesis at variable pH values granted access to a series of phase-pure MnWO(4) catalyst...

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Autores principales: Li, Xuan, Teschner, Detre, Streibel, Verena, Lunkenbein, Thomas, Masliuk, Liudmyla, Fu, Teng, Wang, Yuanqing, Jones, Travis, Seitz, Friedrich, Girgsdies, Frank, Rosowski, Frank, Schlögl, Robert, Trunschke, Annette
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6385647/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30881671
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8sc04641g
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author Li, Xuan
Teschner, Detre
Streibel, Verena
Lunkenbein, Thomas
Masliuk, Liudmyla
Fu, Teng
Wang, Yuanqing
Jones, Travis
Seitz, Friedrich
Girgsdies, Frank
Rosowski, Frank
Schlögl, Robert
Trunschke, Annette
author_facet Li, Xuan
Teschner, Detre
Streibel, Verena
Lunkenbein, Thomas
Masliuk, Liudmyla
Fu, Teng
Wang, Yuanqing
Jones, Travis
Seitz, Friedrich
Girgsdies, Frank
Rosowski, Frank
Schlögl, Robert
Trunschke, Annette
author_sort Li, Xuan
collection PubMed
description The well-defined particle morphology of crystalline MnWO(4) catalysts investigated in the present study facilitates obtaining insight into the origin of selectivity limitations in alkane oxidation. Hydrothermal synthesis at variable pH values granted access to a series of phase-pure MnWO(4) catalysts with particles ranging from cube-like (aspect ratio 1.5) to rod- or needle-like (aspect ratio 6.8) shapes. Kinetic studies reveal a strong dependence of the propane consumption rate on the particle shape. The true origin of the structure sensitivity was unraveled by comprehensive bulk and surface analysis using nitrogen adsorption, XRD, SEM, ADF-STEM, STEM-EELS, XPS, multi-laser excitation Raman and DRIFT/operando FTIR spectroscopies, temperature-programmed oxidation (TPO), in situ NEXAFS, and DFT calculations. The active phase is composed of a thin manganese oxy-hydroxide layer formed on the surface of crystalline MnWO(4.) The differences in catalytic performance within the series clearly illustrate that the structural motif as the most popular descriptor in oxidation catalysis is not essential, since all MnWO(4) catalysts in the series under study exhibit the same bulk crystal structure and bulk chemical composition and are phase pure and homogenous. The variable particle shape serves as a proxy that reflects the formation of varying abundance of redox active Mn(2+)/Mn(3+) surface sites, which correlates with catalytic activity. Operando FTIR spectroscopy directly confirms the formation of Mn–OH surface species by abstraction of hydrogen atoms from the propane molecule on nucleophilic oxygen atoms and suggests that active site regeneration occurs via oxidative dehydrogenation of Mn–OH species indicating a single-site nature of the active sites that does not allow four-electron reduction of molecular oxygen. Instead, intermediates are created that cause side reactions and lower the selectivity. The findings highlight fundamental design criteria that may be applied to advance the development of new alkane oxidation catalysts with improved selectivity.
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spelling pubmed-63856472019-03-15 How to control selectivity in alkane oxidation? Li, Xuan Teschner, Detre Streibel, Verena Lunkenbein, Thomas Masliuk, Liudmyla Fu, Teng Wang, Yuanqing Jones, Travis Seitz, Friedrich Girgsdies, Frank Rosowski, Frank Schlögl, Robert Trunschke, Annette Chem Sci Chemistry The well-defined particle morphology of crystalline MnWO(4) catalysts investigated in the present study facilitates obtaining insight into the origin of selectivity limitations in alkane oxidation. Hydrothermal synthesis at variable pH values granted access to a series of phase-pure MnWO(4) catalysts with particles ranging from cube-like (aspect ratio 1.5) to rod- or needle-like (aspect ratio 6.8) shapes. Kinetic studies reveal a strong dependence of the propane consumption rate on the particle shape. The true origin of the structure sensitivity was unraveled by comprehensive bulk and surface analysis using nitrogen adsorption, XRD, SEM, ADF-STEM, STEM-EELS, XPS, multi-laser excitation Raman and DRIFT/operando FTIR spectroscopies, temperature-programmed oxidation (TPO), in situ NEXAFS, and DFT calculations. The active phase is composed of a thin manganese oxy-hydroxide layer formed on the surface of crystalline MnWO(4.) The differences in catalytic performance within the series clearly illustrate that the structural motif as the most popular descriptor in oxidation catalysis is not essential, since all MnWO(4) catalysts in the series under study exhibit the same bulk crystal structure and bulk chemical composition and are phase pure and homogenous. The variable particle shape serves as a proxy that reflects the formation of varying abundance of redox active Mn(2+)/Mn(3+) surface sites, which correlates with catalytic activity. Operando FTIR spectroscopy directly confirms the formation of Mn–OH surface species by abstraction of hydrogen atoms from the propane molecule on nucleophilic oxygen atoms and suggests that active site regeneration occurs via oxidative dehydrogenation of Mn–OH species indicating a single-site nature of the active sites that does not allow four-electron reduction of molecular oxygen. Instead, intermediates are created that cause side reactions and lower the selectivity. The findings highlight fundamental design criteria that may be applied to advance the development of new alkane oxidation catalysts with improved selectivity. Royal Society of Chemistry 2018-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6385647/ /pubmed/30881671 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8sc04641g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This article is freely available. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence (CC BY 3.0)
spellingShingle Chemistry
Li, Xuan
Teschner, Detre
Streibel, Verena
Lunkenbein, Thomas
Masliuk, Liudmyla
Fu, Teng
Wang, Yuanqing
Jones, Travis
Seitz, Friedrich
Girgsdies, Frank
Rosowski, Frank
Schlögl, Robert
Trunschke, Annette
How to control selectivity in alkane oxidation?
title How to control selectivity in alkane oxidation?
title_full How to control selectivity in alkane oxidation?
title_fullStr How to control selectivity in alkane oxidation?
title_full_unstemmed How to control selectivity in alkane oxidation?
title_short How to control selectivity in alkane oxidation?
title_sort how to control selectivity in alkane oxidation?
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6385647/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30881671
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8sc04641g
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