June 21, 2020
Journal Article

Surface Engineering of Earth-abundant Fe Catalysts for Selective Hydrodeoxygenation of Phenolics in Liquid Phase

Abstract

Development of inexpensive sulfur-free catalysts for selective hydrogenolysis of the C-O bond in phenolics (i.e., selective removal of oxygen without aromatic ring saturation) under liquid-phase conditions is highly challenging. Here, we report an efficient approach to engineer the earth-abundant Fe catalysts with graphene overlayer and alkali metal (i.e., Cs), which produces arenes with 100% selectivity from liquid-phase hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) of phenolics with high durability. In particular, we report that a thin (a few layers) surface graphene overlayer can be engineered on metallic Fe particles (G@Fe) by a controlled surface reaction of carbonaceous compound, which prevents the iron surface from oxidation by hydroxyls or water produced during HDO reaction. More importantly, further tailoring the surface electronic properties of G@Fe with the addition of cesium, creating a Cs-G@Fe composite catalyst, promotes the selective C-O bond cleavage by inhibiting the tautomerization, a pathway that is very facile under liquid-phase conditions. The current study could open a general approach to rational design of highly efficient catalysts for HDO of biomass-derived phenolics.

Revised: July 16, 2020 | Published: June 21, 2020

Citation

Zhang J., J. Sun, L. Kovarik, M.H. Engelhard, L. Du, B. Sudduth, and H. Li, et al. 2020. Surface Engineering of Earth-abundant Fe Catalysts for Selective Hydrodeoxygenation of Phenolics in Liquid Phase. Chemical Science 11, no. 23:5874-5880. PNNL-SA-149539. doi:10.1039/d0sc00983k