Olefin metathesis over supported MoOx catalysts: influence of the oxide support†
Abstract
A series of supported MoOx catalysts on different oxide supports (Al2O3, TiO2, ZrO2, SiO2) were synthesized and investigated for propylene metathesis, characterized with in situ spectroscopies (DRIFTS, Raman, UV-vis) and chemically probed with propylene-TPSR-MS, propylene-TPSR-IR, and ethylene/2-butene titration. Under dehydrated conditions at monolayer coverage or maximum surface dispersion, the surface MoOx sites are present as a mixture of isolated di-oxo (O)2Mo(–O–Al)2 and oligomeric mono-oxo OMo(–O–Al)4/5 sites on Al2O3, primarily oligomeric mono-oxo OMo(–O–Ti)4/5 on TiO2, isolated di-oxo (O)2Mo(–O–Zr)2 and oligomeric mono-oxo OMo(–O–Zr)4/5 on ZrO2, and isolated di-oxo (O)2Mo(–O–Si)2 on SiO2. The bridged (S2-OH) and tri-coordinated (S3-OH) anchoring surface hydroxyls of the oxide supports with strong support cation electronegativity control the activation and number of active surface MoOx sites at low temperatures (<100 °C). The isolated anchoring surface hydroxyls (S-OH) of the oxide supports with strong support cation electronegativity control the activation and number of active surface MoOx sites at high temperatures (>350 °C). Olefin metathesis by the more redox active supported MoOx/TiO2 and MoOx/ZrO2 catalysts is retarded by the formation of stable surface acetone and acetate species that block olefin adsorption. The oxide supports are potent ligands that tune the activation and surface chemistry of the surface MoOx sites for olefin metathesis. This is the first time that the influence of oxide supports on the activation and surface chemistry of supported MoOx sites has been systematically examined.