Fast and Selective Sugar
Conversion to Alkyl Lactate
and Lactic Acid with Bifunctional Carbon–Silica Catalysts
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Abstract
A novel catalyst design for the conversion of mono- and
disaccharides
to lactic acid and its alkyl esters was developed. The design uses
a mesoporous silica, here represented by MCM-41, which is filled with
a polyaromatic to graphite-like carbon network. The particular structure
of the carbon-silica composite allows the accommodation of a broad
variety of catalytically active functions, useful to attain cascade
reactions, in a readily tunable pore texture. The significance of
a joint action of Lewis and weak Brønsted acid sites was studied
here to realize fast and selective sugar conversion. Lewis acidity
is provided by grafting the silica component with Sn(IV), while weak
Brønsted acidity originates from oxygen-containing functional
groups in the carbon part. The weak Brønsted acid content was
varied by changing the amount of carbon loading, the pyrolysis temperature,
and the post-treatment procedure. As both catalytic functions can
be tuned independently, their individual role and optimal balance
can be searched for. It was thus demonstrated for the first time that
the presence of weak Brønsted acid sites is crucial in accelerating
the rate-determining (dehydration) reaction, that is, the first step
in the reaction network from triose to lactate. Composite catalysts
with well-balanced Lewis/Brønsted acidity are able to convert
the trioses, glyceraldehyde and dihydroxyacetone, quantitatively into
ethyl lactate in ethanol with an order of magnitude higher reaction
rate when compared to the Sn grafted MCM-41 reference catalyst. Interestingly,
the ability to tailor the pore architecture further allows the synthesis
of a variety of amphiphilic alkyl lactates from trioses and long chain
alcohols in moderate to high yields. Finally, direct lactate formation
from hexoses, glucose and fructose, and disaccharides composed thereof,
sucrose, was also attempted. For instance, conversion of sucrose with
the bifunctional composite catalyst yields 45% methyl lactate in methanol
at slightly elevated reaction temperature. The hybrid catalyst proved
to be recyclable in various successive runs when used in alcohol solvent