1 research outputs found
MXene Aerogel Derived Ultra-Active Vanadia Catalyst for Selective Conversion of Sustainable Alcohols to Base Chemicals
Selective
oxidation reactions are an important class of the current
chemical industry and will be highly important for future sustainable
chemical production. Especially, the selective oxidation of primary
alcohols is expected to be of high future interest, as alcohols can
be obtained on technical scales from biomass fermentation. The oxidation
of primary alcohols produces aldehydes, which are important intermediates.
While selective methanol oxidation is industrially established, the
commercial catalyst suffers from deactivation. Ethanol selective oxidation
is not commercialized but would give access to sustainable acetaldehyde
production when using renewable ethanol. In this work, it is shown
that employing 2D MXenes as building blocks allows one to design a
nanostructured oxide catalyst composed of mixed valence vanadium oxides,
which outperforms on both reactions known materials by nearly an order
of magnitude in activity, while showing high selectivity and stability.
The study shows that the synthesis route employing 2D materials is
key to obtain these attractive catalysts. V4C3Tx MXene structured as an aerogel precursor
needs to be employed and mildly oxidized in an alcohol and oxygen
atmosphere to result in the aspired nanostructured catalyst composed
of mixed valence VO2, V6O13, and
V3O7. Very likely, the bulk stable reduced valence
state of the material together coupled with the nanorod arrangement
allows for unprecedented oxygen mobility as well as active sites and
results in an ultra-active catalyst
