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Water-splitting titania: effect of doping on fabrication

Hydrogen is undoubtedly one of the most appealing candidates as a replacement for fossil fuels in the automotive sector. Despite the logistical difficulties connected to storage and transportation, hydrogen still remains the most environmentally friendly and sustainable fuel available.

The most common source of hydrogen is steam reforming of hydrocarbons, but intensive research has been devoted to more sustainable production processes such as the thermochemical and photochemical splitting of water into its components.

Several titanium, niobium and tantalum based materials have been employed in the preparation of suitable catalysts for the photochemical splitting of water, often suffering from weaknesses such as limited absorbtion of light in the visible region, chemical instability and other issues related to the materials` morphology.

A recent study by Jiang et al. on doped titania addresses the latter concerns; the group investigated the effect of molibdenum doping (which increases the photonic efficiency of the catalyst) and thermal treatments in the layer-by-layer fabrication of catalytic films.

The study highlights how the concentration of molibdenum affects the temperature of the transitions between different morphologies and the effect of the thermal tratments conducted on the material. A detailed characterisation of the catalysts by TEM, XPS, XRD as well as their photochemical activity shows that the presence of opportune amounts of molibdenum allow for an easier control of the morphology in the fabrication of the material and that higher concentrations of dopant result in a higher photocatalytic actvity.

For more details, please find the full communication here.

Structural and morphological control of Mo doped titania films
Chunxiang Li, Zhongping Yao, Guangmei Wu, Zhaohua Jiang and Fangzhou Jia
Catal. Sci. Technol., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C1CY00024A, Communication

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Perspective: Heterogenised bio-inspired catalysts

Enzymes are by far the most active and selective catalysts known to chemistry but although progress has been made to incorporate them into industrial use (i.e. in batch reactors, fixed bed immobilised enzyme reactors), their intrinsic biological nature makes them too substrate-specific and limits them to a reduced range of operational conditions.

In an attempt to bypass these limitations, scientists developed bio-inspired catalysts: structures designed upon the active sites of enzymes but lacking the organic framework that characterise them, making them easier to heterogenise, recover and more resilient to harsh conditions than their natural counterpart.

To reintroduce the selectivity given by the enzyme`s structure, these catalysts can be incorporated into micro- or mesoporous supports such as silica and zeolites exploiting ionic interactions between metal and support or different anchoring techniques.The selectivity is mostly size-driven, dictated by the dimension of the pores in the material, or induced by the presence of chiral ligands on the catalyst.

In addition to metal complexes, natural and modified aminoacids can also be chemically bound to porous supports, resulting in efficient catalysis of a wide range of reactions. The characterisation of the active sites, though, is made more difficult by the lack of appropriate techniques that clearly discriminate the catalytic species from the support.

In-depth coverage of the topic and future perspectives can be found here.

Design strategies for engineering selectivity in bio-inspired heterogeneous catalysts
David J. Xuereb and Robert Raja
Catal. Sci. Technol., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0CY00088D, Perspective

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Advances in NOx disposal

Whenever dangerous nitrogen oxides are generated after a fuel-combustion process, a selective catalytic reduction (SCR) step is implemented in the process to catalyse their conversion into less harmful molecular nitrogen and water. Large diesel engines, industrial boilers and furnaces are an example of the areas in which this technology plays a fundamental role in keeping the fumes emission clean.

Most catalysts for SCR are consist of metal oxides absorbed on porous supports as alumina, zirconia, titanium oxide and zeolites that, in synergy with a reducing agent like ammonia or urea efficiently decompose nitrogen oxides at relatively low temperatures. The understanding of the interactions between the metal oxides and the supports is of key importance in the development of increasingly efficient catalysts.

After working on copper-containing catalysts for the ammonia-catalysed SCR with low toxic profile, the Chinese group of Duan Weng, presented a comprehensive characterisation of their most effective CuOx-WOx-zirconia systems and highlighted the importance of tungsten oxides for the efficacy of the catalyst. The samples where studied by X-ray diffraction, photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Raman spectroscopy and other techniques.

The group concluded that the increased activity of their tungsten-containing catalysts might be attributed to the higher dispersion of copper oxides obtained in the presence of tungsten clusters, directly linked to an increased Lewis and Bronsted acidity that allow for higher adsorption of ammonia and inhibits its oxidation on the catalyst.

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Synergistic effects between copper and tungsten on the structural and acidic properties of CuOx/WOx–ZrO2 catalyst

Zhichun Si, Duan Weng, Xiaodong Wu, Yang Jiang and Bin Wang
Catal. Sci. Technol., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0CY00086H, Paper

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Sustainable raw materials for chemistry

As the natural supplies of fossil fuels quickly deplete due to the increasing demands of modern society, industrial chemistry needs to find alternative sources for the essential building blocks on which it relies upon. New raw material deriving from sustainable sources need to be exploited to diminish the use of petrol-based products.

A viable alternative has been investigated by Jones et al., whose UK-based research focused on the catalytic conversion of easily produced ethanol into 1,3-butadiene, a common precursor in the industrial production of rubber. The groups developed a silica-supported multi-metallic system that using cooperative catalysis drives the transformation of ethanol into acetaldehyde and through a number of other intermediates, ultimately produces 1,3-butadiene.

The catalysts could be easily prepared mixing slurries of water-soluble salts of the desired metals with silica of different porosity, followed by water evaporation and calcination in air at different temperatures.

Several combinations of metals and silica supports were tested, finding the ZnO:ZrO2 couple to provide the higher conversions and selectivity for the diene (38 %) in 1 to 3 hours, although with relevant amounts of ethene produced as a side product. Even better selectivity could be achieved introducing extra acetaldehyde in the reaction. When ethanol was fed into the system in these conditions the selectivity for 1,3-butadiene increased to 66 %. A tri-metallic system based on zinc, copper and zirconium was also investigated, providing higher conversions but lower selectivity.

Find more in the original article.

Investigations into the conversion of ethanol into 1,3-butadiene
Matthew D. Jones, Callum G. Keir, Carlo Di Iulio, Ruth A. M. Robertson, Cliff V. Williams and David C. Apperley
Catal. Sci. Technol., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0CY00081G, Paper

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Hybrid membranes for heterogeneous catalysis

Membranes are versatile supports for the immobilisation of catalysts; they allow the use of different manufacturing materials and their properties such as pore size, morphology, flexibility, chemical and thermal stability can be finely tuned. These polymeric membranes have successfully been used to support chiral complexes of ruthenium-Binap and manganese-Salen in enantioselective epoxidation and hydrogenation reactions. Although versatile and ideal for industrial scale applications, their major drawback proved to be metal leeching, which reduced their efficiency and contaminated the products.

Research groups lead by Barbaro recently developed a series of organic/inorganic polymeric membranes incorporating rhodium complexes of chiral diphosphino ligands that proved nearly immune to metal leeching and provided clean, enantioselective hydrogenation of methyl-2-acetoamidoacrylate with enantiomeric excesses comparable with their homogeneous analogues. The novelty of the approach resided in the incorporation of the metal occurring on the preformed membrane, thus avoiding derivatisation steps and chemical modifications.

The reaction times proved to be considerably longer than the homogeneous catalyst with yields exceeding 90 % only after 17 hours, but enantioselectivities of up to 98 % could be achieved without any loss of activity after five cycles using methanol as the solvent. A screening of several other substrates and solvents proved the versatility of the system. Remarkably, the most performing membranes presented a metal leeching of less than 1 ppm even after 25 hours of use in methanol, outperforming existing catalytic membranes. The stability of the membrane-complex adduct is thought to reside in the interaction between the metal and tungsten oxide (WO3) or sulphite anions in the membrane structure.

Find more about the article here.

Enantioselective hydrogenation of prochiral substrates in catalytic membrane reactors
Pierluigi Barbaro, Claudio Bianchini, Francesca Liguori, Claudio Pirovano and Haruo Sawa
Catal. Sci. Technol., 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0CY00030B, Communication

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