Identification of active sites in gold-catalyzed hydrogenation of acrolein

被引:310
作者
Mohr, C
Hofmeister, H
Radnik, J
Claus, P
机构
[1] Tech Univ Darmstadt, Inst Chem Technol 2, Dept Chem, D-64287 Darmstadt, Germany
[2] Max Planck Inst Microstruct Phys, D-06120 Halle An Der Saale, Germany
[3] Berlin Aldershof eV, Inst Appl Chem, D-12489 Berlin, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1021/ja027321q
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
The active sites of supported gold catalysts, favoring the adsorption of C=O groups of acrolein and subsequent reaction to allyl alcohol, have been identified as edges of gold nanoparticles. After our recent finding that this reaction preferentially occurs on single crystalline particles rather than multiply twinned ones, this paper reports on a new approach to distinguish different features of the gold particle morphology. Elucidation of the active site issue cannot be simply done by varying the size of gold particles, since the effects of faceting and multiply twinned particles may interfere. Therefore, modification of the gold particle surface by indium has been used to vary the active site characteristics of a suitable catalyst, and a selective decoration of gold particle faces has been observed, leaving edges free. This is in contradiction to theoretical predictions, suggesting a preferred occupation of the low-coordinated edges of the gold particles. On the bimetallic catalyst, the desired allyl alcohol is the main product (selectivity 63%; temperature 593 K, total pressure P-total = 2 MPa). From the experimentally proven correlation between surface structure and catalytic behavior, the edges of single crystalline gold particles have been identified as active sites for the preferred C=O hydrogenation.
引用
收藏
页码:1905 / 1911
页数:7
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   Infra-red reflection absorption spectroscopic study on adsorption structures of acrolein on polycrystalline gold and Au(111) surfaces under ultra-high vacuum conditions [J].
Akita, M ;
Osaka, N ;
Itoh, K .
SURFACE SCIENCE, 1998, 405 (2-3) :172-181
[2]  
Augustine R. L., 1995, HETEROGENEOUS CATALY
[3]   Promotion by sulfur of gold catalysts for crotyl alcohol formation from crotonaldehyde hydrogenation [J].
Bailie, JE ;
Hutchings, GJ .
CHEMICAL COMMUNICATIONS, 1999, (21) :2151-2152
[4]   Hydrogenation of but-2-enal over supported Au/ZnO catalysts [J].
Bailie, JE ;
Abdullah, HA ;
Anderson, JA ;
Rochester, CH ;
Richardson, NV ;
Hodge, N ;
Zhang, JG ;
Burrows, A ;
Kiely, CJ ;
Hutchings, GJ .
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2001, 3 (18) :4113-4121
[5]  
BAUER K, 2000, ULLMANNS ENCY IND CH
[6]   SUPPORTED METAL-CATALYSTS - SOME UNSOLVED PROBLEMS [J].
BOND, GC .
CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS, 1991, 20 (04) :441-475
[7]  
BOND GC, 1973, J CHEM SOC CHEM COMM, P444
[8]   Characterization of the microstructure and phase formation in the Au-In system using transmission electron microscopy [J].
Chang, ZC ;
Lu, FH ;
Shieu, FS .
MATERIALS CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2001, 70 (02) :137-143
[9]   THE INFLUENCE OF PARTICLE-SIZE ON THE CATALYTIC PROPERTIES OF SUPPORTED METALS [J].
CHE, M ;
BENNETT, CO .
ADVANCES IN CATALYSIS, 1989, 36 :55-172
[10]   Supported gold nanoparticles from quantum dot to mesoscopic size scale:: Effect of electronic and structural properties on catalytic hydrogenation of conjugated functional groups [J].
Claus, P ;
Brückner, A ;
Mohr, C ;
Hofmeister, H .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2000, 122 (46) :11430-11439