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Light alkane oxidation using catalysts prepared by chemical vapour impregnation: tuning alcohol selectivity through catalyst pre-treatment

Light alkane oxidation using catalysts prepared by chemical vapour impregnation: tuning alcohol selectivity through catalyst pre-treatment
Light alkane oxidation using catalysts prepared by chemical vapour impregnation: tuning alcohol selectivity through catalyst pre-treatment
Fe/ZSM-5(30) catalysts have been prepared by chemical vapour impregnation (CVI) using iron(III) acetylacetonate as the precursor. These materials have been used for the oxidation of methane and ethane using aqueous hydrogen peroxide as oxidant. Heating in air leads to materials that exhibit high catalytic activity and give formic and acetic acid with high selectivity from methane and ethane respectively. Heat treatment of the uncalcined materials under a reducing atmosphere results in partial reduction of iron from the FeIII to FeII oxidation state with the majority of the iron being present as isolated octahedral extra-framework species having oxygen neighbours and showing no evidence of a coordination shell containing Al or Fe, as evidenced from studies using X-ray absorption and UV-Vis spectroscopies. These hydrogen treated catalysts show the same catalytic activity as their analogues formed by heating in air, but in contrast exhibit higher alcohol selectivities for both methane and ethane conversion to oxygenates and are reusable. Our findings for both the oxidation of methane and ethane indicate that the selectivity to the oxidation products, i.e. acids or alcohols, can be controlled by tuning the active site structure and/or oxidation state of the Fe species in Fe/ZSM-5.
1478-6524
3603-3616
Forde, Michael M.
b0abea4e-5cb4-4a69-803c-01486f7cb748
Armstrong, Robert D.
68b4a08e-6ed9-4ef3-8bcb-880f09740ea1
McVicker, Rebecca
4e4368b1-eafc-472b-8508-21c8c60537ee
Wells, Peter P.
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Dimitratos, Nikolaos
a4385576-4a05-478b-8389-460bfb43412b
He, Qian
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Lu, Li
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Jenkins, Robert L.
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Hammond, Ceri
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Lopez-Sanchez, Jose Antonio
164adebc-5155-4505-9e88-2401990e558d
Kiely, Christopher J.
431afe51-dda4-44fb-a889-8f0e95a1b902
Hutchings, Graham J.
efab6909-c2f0-4992-a188-10b761075311
Forde, Michael M.
b0abea4e-5cb4-4a69-803c-01486f7cb748
Armstrong, Robert D.
68b4a08e-6ed9-4ef3-8bcb-880f09740ea1
McVicker, Rebecca
4e4368b1-eafc-472b-8508-21c8c60537ee
Wells, Peter P.
bc4fdc2d-a490-41bf-86cc-400edecf2266
Dimitratos, Nikolaos
a4385576-4a05-478b-8389-460bfb43412b
He, Qian
9983d6cf-fa90-4e7f-874c-17342aa4eeac
Lu, Li
4f34edb1-6778-43e6-b0ad-ae556395f6c0
Jenkins, Robert L.
7c9a06ba-1439-40e2-a412-7f22697d8280
Hammond, Ceri
fcbbcd87-a902-4259-8dff-9380c92aa603
Lopez-Sanchez, Jose Antonio
164adebc-5155-4505-9e88-2401990e558d
Kiely, Christopher J.
431afe51-dda4-44fb-a889-8f0e95a1b902
Hutchings, Graham J.
efab6909-c2f0-4992-a188-10b761075311

Forde, Michael M., Armstrong, Robert D., McVicker, Rebecca, Wells, Peter P., Dimitratos, Nikolaos, He, Qian, Lu, Li, Jenkins, Robert L., Hammond, Ceri, Lopez-Sanchez, Jose Antonio, Kiely, Christopher J. and Hutchings, Graham J. (2014) Light alkane oxidation using catalysts prepared by chemical vapour impregnation: tuning alcohol selectivity through catalyst pre-treatment. Chemical Science, 5 (9), 3603-3616. (doi:10.1039/c4sc00545g).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Fe/ZSM-5(30) catalysts have been prepared by chemical vapour impregnation (CVI) using iron(III) acetylacetonate as the precursor. These materials have been used for the oxidation of methane and ethane using aqueous hydrogen peroxide as oxidant. Heating in air leads to materials that exhibit high catalytic activity and give formic and acetic acid with high selectivity from methane and ethane respectively. Heat treatment of the uncalcined materials under a reducing atmosphere results in partial reduction of iron from the FeIII to FeII oxidation state with the majority of the iron being present as isolated octahedral extra-framework species having oxygen neighbours and showing no evidence of a coordination shell containing Al or Fe, as evidenced from studies using X-ray absorption and UV-Vis spectroscopies. These hydrogen treated catalysts show the same catalytic activity as their analogues formed by heating in air, but in contrast exhibit higher alcohol selectivities for both methane and ethane conversion to oxygenates and are reusable. Our findings for both the oxidation of methane and ethane indicate that the selectivity to the oxidation products, i.e. acids or alcohols, can be controlled by tuning the active site structure and/or oxidation state of the Fe species in Fe/ZSM-5.

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Accepted/In Press date: 14 June 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 June 2014
Published date: 1 September 2014
Organisations: Organic Chemistry: SCF

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 400603
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/400603
ISSN: 1478-6524
PURE UUID: 29103f68-5f7f-4c1f-b4ba-8007066a255e
ORCID for Peter P. Wells: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0859-9172

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Date deposited: 20 Sep 2016 08:59
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:24

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Contributors

Author: Michael M. Forde
Author: Robert D. Armstrong
Author: Rebecca McVicker
Author: Peter P. Wells ORCID iD
Author: Nikolaos Dimitratos
Author: Qian He
Author: Li Lu
Author: Robert L. Jenkins
Author: Ceri Hammond
Author: Jose Antonio Lopez-Sanchez
Author: Christopher J. Kiely
Author: Graham J. Hutchings

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