József M. Tukacsa,
Márton Bohusa,
Gábor Dibób and
László T. Mika*a
aDepartment of Chemical and Environmental Process Engineering, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Budapest, Hungary. E-mail: laszlo.t.mika@mail.bme.hu; Fax: +36 1 463 3197; Tel: +36 1 463 1263
bJános Selye University, Faculty of Education, Department of Chemistry, Bratislavská str. 3322, Komárno SK-94501, Slovakia
First published on 13th January 2017
Bidentate phosphine-modified Ru-based homogeneous catalyst systems were developed for solvent-free conversion of furfural to furfuryl alcohol as a versatile biomass-based C5-platform molecule. The effect of the ligand structure and ligand concentration, the operating pressure and the reaction temperature on the catalyst's activity were studied in details. Under optimized conditions complete conversion of furfural to furfuryl alcohol was achieved in the absence of any added solvent and without any by-product formation. The maximum turnover frequency (6273 h−1) and 100% atom economy were obtained by using homogeneous Ru/Ph2P(CH2)4PPh2 catalyst, which was recyclable for twelve consecutive runs without affecting the catalytic performance of the catalyst.
The rapidly expanding research activity on biomass conversion has identified several renewable platform molecules e.g. 5-hydroxymethyl furfural,3 levulinic acid,4 γ-valerolactone (GVL)5,6 which could replace fossil based ones in petrochemical industry. Since furfural (FAL) has also been selected as a biomass-based basic chemical,7 its subsequent transformation has received an utmost importance in the last decade.
One of the most important derivatives of furfural is furfuryl alcohol (FOL), which is an another valuable C5-platform molecule. It can be used for the production of thermostatic resins, plasticizers, adhesives, fragrances, diols, tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol, 2-methyltetrahydrofuran (Scheme 1).8,9 While its hydrolysis results in the formation of levulinic acid (LA),8a,10,11 ethyl levulinate can be obtained by its ethanolysis.12 It is important to emphasize that LA is a feedstock for the synthesis of GVL that can be used for the production of energy and carbon-based chemicals5 including fuels,13 fuel additives,5 alkanes,14 fine chemicals,15 or used as a green solvent.16 Consequently, an efficient solvent-free conversion of FAL to FOL can be the initial step in the environmentally benign and more sustainable production of biomass-based C5-building blocks.
Scheme 1 Reaction scheme for conversion of hemicellulose to furfuryl alcohol (FOL) and its selected applications. |
Obviously, the most effective protocol to produce furfuryl alcohol is the hydrogenation of furfural by using a selective catalyst. The reduction can be carried out in the presence of either heterogeneous7 or homogeneous catalysts. The heterogeneous copper-chromite catalyst, operating in either gas or liquid phase, has been exclusively used for selective hydrogenation of FAL at industrial scale for over six decades. Its selectivity to FOL is 98% in liquid phase, and 35–98% in gas phase. However, due to the catalyst's toxicity and carcinogenic potential, several attempts have been made to introduce environmentally benign alternatives.17 Accordingly, several heterogeneous systems were invented based on copper,8b,9b,18 cobalt,9a palladium,19 platinum,20 and nickel21 operating in temperature range of 100–200 °C. Expectedly, the transition metal-based homogeneous catalyst systems exhibits significantly higher activity, selectivity, and better mass and heat transfer efficiency under milder conditions as compared to heterogeneous ones. Paganelli et al. reported the aqueous phase reduction of FAL by using a recyclable dihydrothioctic acid-modified Rh-based system with high conversion (70–99%) and outstanding selectivity (>98%). However, the turnover frequencies (TOFs) were rather low (20–60 h−1).22 It has been recently shown that RuCl2(PPh)3, in the presence of acetic acid, can reduce FAL with TOF of 32 h−1 and conversion of 93.6%.23 Similar activity for FAL hydrogenation was detected for Ru-tris(2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionate)3 catalyst with conversion of 86%.24 Rothenberg et al. introduced an NHC-based Ru-catalyst for the conversion of FAL to FOL by using iPrOH as a hydrogen source. Although excellent selectivities were achieved at 60 °C, the addition of base e.g. KOH and KOtBu were necessary, which resulted in separation problems.25
We report here the development of a selective, solvent-free hydrogenation system for conversion of furfural to furfuryl alcohol using a recyclable bidentate phosphine modified ruthenium catalyst (Scheme 2).
Entry | [Ru] × 103 (mol dm−3) | Ligand | [Ligand] × 103 (mol dm−3) | T (°C) | p(H2) (bar) | Time (h) | Conversion (%) | TON | TOF (h−1) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Solvent EtOAc (20 mL), catalyst precursor: RuCl2(PPh3). | |||||||||
1 | 1.56 | TPPTS | 15.6 | 140 | 90 | 3 | 13.8 | 1054 | 351 |
2 | 1.56 | Bu-DPPDS | 15.6 | 140 | 90 | 3 | 38.7 | 2956 | 985 |
3 | 1.56 | Bu-DPPDS | 15.6 | 140 | 90 | 5 | 65.8 | 5027 | 1005 |
4 | 3.07a | PPh3 | — | 70 | 30 | 3 | 98.0 | 33 | 11 |
5 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 140 | 30 | 1.3 | >99.9 | 3764 | 2895 |
6 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 140 | 75 | 1.3 | >99.9 | 3764 | 2895 |
7 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 140 | 50 | 1.3 | >99.9 | 3764 | 2895 |
8 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 140 | 25 | 1.3 | >99.9 | 3764 | 2895 |
9 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 140 | 15 | 1.3 | 89.0 | 3350 | 2576 |
10 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 140 | 10 | 1.3 | 59.7 | 2220 | 1708 |
11 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 140 | 25 | 0.8 | >99.9 | 3764 | 4705 |
12 | 3.10 | DPPE | 31.0 | 140 | 25 | 1.5 | <1 | <1 | <1 |
13 | 3.10 | DPPPr | 31.0 | 140 | 25 | 1.5 | 6.3 | 237 | 182 |
14 | 3.10 | DPPPe | 31.0 | 140 | 25 | 1.3 | 90.4 | 3402 | 2617 |
15 | 3.10 | DPPH | 31.0 | 140 | 25 | 1.3 | 24.1 | 903 | 695 |
16 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 160 | 25 | 0.6 | >99.9 | 3764 | 6273 |
17 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 120 | 25 | 1.3 | 3.2 | 113 | 86 |
18 | 3.10 | DPPB | 31.0 | 130 | 25 | 1.3 | 6.9 | 263 | 202 |
It has been shown that hydrogenation of CO double bonds, by using homogeneous mono or bidentate phosphine-modified Ru-catalysts, showed saturation kinetics for hydrogen pressure.27,30 Therefore, the influence of the hydrogen pressure on the conversion of FAL was studied in the range of 10–100 bar using Ru/DPPB system (Table 1, entries 6–10). Expectedly, significant pressure dependence was revealed below 20 bar and the conversion became independent over 25 bar (Fig. 1). These results are in good agreement with the reported kinetics for the Ru/PPh3 system,23 or for reduction of LA.27 It should be noted that full conversion was achieved under 25 bar of H2 at 140 °C for 50 min (Table 1, entry 11 and ESI Fig. S1†), as well.
Fig. 1 Effect of p(H2) on the conversion of FAL. [Ru] = 3.1 × 10−3 mol dm−3 (0.16 mol%), [DPPB] = 3.1 × 10−2 mol dm−3 (1.6 mol%), 140 °C, t = 1.3 h. |
It has been shown for bidentate ligand modified Ru-based catalyst that the size of the chelate ring on the catalytically active hydride species has a significant influence on the activity.29 By varying the number of methylene spacers in the ligand, in case of 1,2-bis(diphenylphoshino)ethane (DPPE) and 1,3-bis(diphenylphoshino)propane (DPPPr) resulted in significantly lower conversion under identical conditions (Table 1, entries 12, 13). 1,5-Bis(diphenylphoshino)pentane (DPPPe) showed similar activity compared to DPPB; however, in case of the incorporation of six methylene groups between the phosphorus atoms (DPPH), moderate conversion was detected (Table 1, entries 14, 15). It is well established that reaction of Ru(acac)3 and BINAP leads to the formation of Ru(BINAP)(acac)2 complexes under hydrogen.31 Since the chelating ring of Ru–BINAP and Ru–DPPB complexes are similar, it is reasonable that the initial step of catalyst activation is formation Ru(DPPB)(acac)2, which turns to hydride form Ru(DPPB)2(H)2 under reaction conditions.32 Due to the six CH2 units, it can also be assumed that DPPH partially acts as a monodentate ligand in the Ru-center.33 In addition, electronic properties of the ligands could have significant effect on the activity as well as an electron donating monodentate trialkyl phosphine could react with FAL as an aldehyde to form an adduct.34 To establish this interaction, 10 μL (0.04 mmol) of PBu3 was mixed with 500 μL (6 mmol) of FAL at room temperature. The 31P-NMR of the reaction mixture established the interaction between PBu3 and FAL by a broad peak at 35.2 ppm. When DPPB (0.038 mmol) was dissolved in 500 μL (6 mmol) of FAL, this interaction cannot be detected by 31P-NMR. Thus, reaction of FAL with a diphenylalkylphosphine subunit is seemingly retarded. To compare the activity of PBu3 modified Ru catalyst with the DPPB analogue, we attempted to reduce 30 mL of FAL in the presence of catalyst system in situ formed from 0.095 mmol Ru(acac)3 and 1.86 mmol of PBu3 under 25 bar at 140 °C. Expectedly, the PBu3 modified system has significantly lower activity (TOF = 684 h−1, ESI Fig. S2†) than DPPB containing one.
The influence of temperature on the activity was monitored by the use of DPPB ligand (Table 1, entries 16–18). Below 130 °C negligible conversions were detected after 1.3 h. Expectedly, at 160 °C complete conversion was obtained for 0.6 h exhibiting TOF of 6273 h−1 as the highest TOF value published for homogeneous reduction of furfural so far.
To achieve further improvement in the TOF by optimizing the ligand concentration in the reaction mixture, we investigated the reduction of FAL by using a Ru/DPPB catalyst in the concentration range of [DPPB] = 15.5 × 10−3 to 37.2 × 10−3 at a constant Ru content of 3.1 × 10−3 mol dm−3. Expectedly, the ligand content had a strong influence on the formation of FOL as shown in Fig. 2. It is in accordance with results published for Ru-catalyzed reduction of CO bond.27
Fig. 2 Turnover frequencies of the conversion of conversion of FAL to FOL under 25 bar of H2 at 140 °C for 50 min. [Ru] = 3.1 × 10−3 mol dm−3 (0.16 mol%). |
The recyclability is one of the most important issues of a homogeneous catalyst system. Any other solvent-free conversion opens a facile way to separate the homogeneous catalyst from the product by a simple distillation, supposing that the catalyst is stable enough. Therefore we evaluated the possible separation of the catalyst in situ generated form 0.191 mmol Ru(acac)3 and ten-fold excess of DPPB in 30 mL of FAL. Under 25 bar of H2 at 140 °C, a yield of 62.4% was obtained for 0.5 h. When the reaction was completed after 1.3 h, all volatile compounds were removed from the dark brown solution by vacuum distillation (3–5 mm Hg) performed on a 20 cm glass column resulting in a colorless liquid, which was identified as 99.99% FOL by GC-MS. In addition, no phosphorus species was detected by 31P-NMR spectroscopy. The dark brown glue-like distillation residue containing the catalyst, the excess amount of ligands, and the rest of furfuryl alcohol could be completely dissolved in 30 mL of FAL at room temperature. The brown solution was transferred into the reactor followed by pressurizing to 25 bar of H2. The reaction was initiated by increasing the temperature up to 140 °C. Similarly to the workup procedures of the initial run, the second yield was also >99.9% FOL which was unchanged in the next 10 runs (Fig. 3, ESI Table S1†). The conversions were checked by sampling at 0.5 h and it can be stated that no significant changes in the catalyst's activity were observed in the first 12 runs (Fig. 2). The results evidenced, that the improved Ru/BDPP catalyst system was stable enough for successful catalyst recycling including a low-pressure separation step (Fig. 4).
Fig. 3 Effect of p(H2) on the conversion of FAL. [Ru] = 3.1 × 10−3 mol dm−3 (0.16 mol%), [DPPB] = 3.1 × 10−2 mol dm−3 (1.6 mol%), 140 °C, t = 1.3 h. |
In a typical high pressure hydrogenation experiment, a 120 mL Parr HP reactor (ESI Fig. S3†) was charged with 30 mL (34.6 g, 360 mmol) furfural followed by the addition of Ru(acac)3 and the corresponding phosphine ligand resulting in a dark brown solution. The reaction mixture was pressurized to the desired values and heated up to desired temperature to initiate the reaction. Samples were taken for off-line GC analysis via a dip-leg into a sample holder. After the given reaction time, the autoclave was cooled to ambient temperature and stirring was stopped.
The configuration of catalyst recycling experiments is depicted on ESI Fig. S4.†
GC-FID sample analysis were performed on a HP 5890 instrument equipped with a HP-5 capillary column (15 m) using H2 as a carrier gas. For the analysis, 10 μL of the reaction mixture was added to 1 mL of methylene chloride followed by the addition of 10 μL toluene as an internal standard.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ra24723g |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |