Selective hydrogenation of unsaturated carbonyls by Ni–Fe-based alloy catalysts†
Abstract
Ni–Fe alloy catalysts prepared by a simple hydrothermal method and subsequent H2 treatment exhibited the greatest activity and selectivity for the hydrogenation of biomass-derived furfural to furfuryl alcohol among the examined second metals, such as Al, Ga, In, Co, and Ti. This work reveals that the alloying of Ni and Fe is a key factor in achieving highly selective hydrogenation of the CO moiety in unsaturated carbonyl substrates. We found that decreasing the temperature of H2 treatment (i.e. decreasing the crystallite size), e.g. Ni–Fe(2)HT-573 K (TOF = 952 h−1), increased the activity compared to that over Ni–Fe(2)HT-673 (TOF = 375 h−1) for furfural hydrogenation. This result suggests that a low-coordinated Ni–Fe alloy was imperative for the catalytic cycle. Moreover, the effect of the metal/support interface was critical; despite the high catalytic performance of Ni–Fe/TiO2, Ni–Fe/Al2O3, and Ni–Fe/CeO2, Ni–Fe supported on SiO2, taeniolite, and hydrotalcite catalysts were ineffective. Vibrational studies using FT-IR measurement confirmed that furfural was physically adsorbed on the surface of the Ni–Fe alloy catalyst via an η1(O) configuration. The synthetic scope of the Ni–Fe catalytic system was very broad; various types of unsaturated carbonyls, such as unsaturated aromatics, unconjugated aliphatics, and a large substituent, were selectively converted into the corresponding unsaturated alcohols.