JACS Au | 2021

Elucidating the Cooperative Roles of Water and Lewis Acid–Base Pairs in Cascade C–C Coupling and Self-Deoxygenation Reactions

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Water plays pivotal roles in tailoring reaction pathways in many important reactions, including cascade C–C bond formation and oxygen elimination. Herein, a kinetic study combined with complementary analyses (DRIFTS, isotopic study, 1H solid-state magic angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations are performed to elucidate the roles of water in cascade acetone-to-isobutene reactions on a ZnxZryOz mixed metal oxide with balanced Lewis acid–base pairs. Our results reveal that the reaction follows the acetone–diacetone alcohol–isobutene pathway. Isobutene is produced through an intramolecular rearrangement of the eight-membered ring intermediate formed via the adsorption of diacetone alcohol on the Lewis acid–base pairs in the presence of cofed water. OH adspecies, formed by the dissociative adsorption of water on the catalyst surface, were found to distort diacetone alcohol’s hydroxyl functional group toward its carbonyl functional group and facilitate the intramolecular rearrangement of diacetone alcohol to form isobutene. In the absence of water, diacetone alcohol binds strongly to the Lewis acid site, e.g., at a Zr4+ site, via its carbonyl functional group, leading to its dramatic structural distortion and further dehydration reaction to form mesityl oxide as well as subsequent polymerization reactions and the formation of coke. The present results provide insights into the cooperative roles of water and Lewis acid–base pairs in catalytic upgrading of biomass to fuels and chemicals.

Volume 1
Pages 1471 - 1487
DOI 10.1021/jacsau.1c00218
Language English
Journal JACS Au

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