Oleg G.
Salnikov
ab,
Hsueh-Ju
Liu
c,
Alexey
Fedorov
c,
Dudari B.
Burueva
ab,
Kirill V.
Kovtunov
*ab,
Christophe
Copéret
c and
Igor V.
Koptyug
ab
aInternational Tomography Center, SB RAS, 3A Institutskaya St., 630090 Novosibirsk, Russia. E-mail: kovtunov@tomo.nsc.ru
bNovosibirsk State University, 2 Pirogova St., 630090 Novosibirsk, Russia
cDepartment of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences, ETH Zürich, Vladimir-Prelog-Weg 1-5, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland
First published on 20th December 2016
Mechanistic insight into the semihydrogenation of 1-butyne and 2-butyne on Cu nanoparticles supported on partially dehydroxylated silica (Cu/SiO2-700) was obtained using parahydrogen. Hydrogenation of 1-butyne over Cu/SiO2-700 yielded 1-butene with ≥97% selectivity. The surface modification of this catalyst with tricyclohexylphosphine (PCy3) increased the selectivity to 1-butene up to nearly 100%, although at the expense of reduced catalytic activity. Similar trends were observed in the hydrogenation of 2-butyne, where Cu/SiO2-700 provided a selectivity to 2-butene in the range of 72–100% depending on the reaction conditions, while the catalyst modified with PCy3 again demonstrated nearly 100% selectivity. Parahydrogen-induced polarization effects observed in hydrogenation reactions catalyzed by copper-based catalysts demonstrate the viability of pairwise hydrogen addition over these catalysts. Contribution of pairwise hydrogen addition to 1-butyne was estimated to be at least 0.2–0.6% for unmodified Cu/SiO2-700 and ≥2.7% for Cu/SiO2-700 modified with PCy3, highlighting the effect of surface modification with the tricyclohexylphosphine ligand.
That said, addressing the molecular mechanisms in heterogeneous catalysis is inherently difficult because of the low abundance of catalytically relevant sites and low sensitivity of many conventional spectroscopic techniques, especially when applied to surfaces.10 The latter is a long-standing problem in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).11 One strategy to increase the sensitivity utilizes hyperpolarization of nuclear spins, which creates nuclear spin polarization beyond the thermal equilibrium.12 Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) is a technique that exploits the transfer of polarization from electrons to nuclei.13,14 DNP was successfully applied to study surfaces of solid materials,10,15,16 including catalysts.17,18 Another hyperpolarization technique is parahydrogen-induced polarization (PHIP), which creates non-equilibrium magnetization using a high spin order of parahydrogen (p-H2).19–21 Parahydrogen itself cannot be detected by NMR because of its zero nuclear spin. However if p-H2-derived hydrogen atoms are added to an unsaturated asymmetric substrate as a pair, the corresponding NMR signals of the reaction product are enhanced because the parahydrogen-derived protons retain their spin correlation. This effect was demonstrated with homogeneous19,22 and heterogeneous23–27 hydrogenation catalysts, the latter of which were utilized both in the liquid25–27 and in the gas23,24 phases. Applied to heterogeneous catalysis, PHIP provides very valuable mechanistic28–32 and kinetic33 insights and can be used for MRI visualization of operating catalytic reactors.34,35
Here, we use PHIP to obtain mechanistic insight into selective semihydrogenation of alkynes on promising Cu catalysts, in particular to probe whether or not the pairwise hydrogen addition route operates on these systems and how the phosphine ligand might be involved in modifying the reaction pathway and thereby the selectivity of silica-supported Cu nanoparticles.
Commercially available 1-butene, 1-butyne (Sigma-Aldrich, ≥99%), 2-butyne (Sigma-Aldrich, 99%) and hydrogen were used as received. For the PHIP experiments, hydrogen gas was enriched with parahydrogen to 50% by passing it through a layer of FeO(OH) maintained at liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K). The 1:4 mixtures of 1-butene/p-H2 and 1-butyne/p-H2 or a 1:11:5 mixture of 2-butyne/p-H2/He were used in the hydrogenation experiments.
Catalysts (20–105 mg) were loaded in the 1/4′′ outer diameter (OD) stainless steel reactor between two pieces of fiberglass tissue in an argon-filled glove box. The reactor was then sealed with two Swagelok valves inside the glove box. All lines between the tank with the gas mixture and the reactor were preliminarily evacuated. The reactor was heated in a tubular furnace; the temperature was varied from 150 to 550 °C. The reaction gas mixture was supplied to the reactor and then to the NMR tube placed inside an NMR spectrometer through a 1/16′′ OD PTFE capillary. All hydrogenation reactions were carried out at atmospheric pressure. The gas flow rate was controlled using an Aalborg rotameter. 1H NMR spectra of the reaction mixtures in the gas phase were acquired using a 300 MHz Bruker AV 300 NMR spectrometer using a single π/2 radiofrequency pulse.
The Cu/SiO2-700 catalyst showed modest to fair activity in 1-butyne hydrogenation at 350–550 °C, with overall conversions in the 37–81% range, depending on the gas flow rate and temperature (see Table 1), with no significant activity below 300 °C. High selectivity toward 1-butene (≥97%) was always observed (Table 1). Even though hydrogen adsorption on the Cu surface is dissociative,37,38 PHIP effects were detected in 1H NMR spectra not only for vinylic protons of 1-butene but also for protons of its ethyl moiety as a result of spontaneous transfer of polarization in the Earth's magnetic field (Fig. 1b and c).39 The observed signal enhancements (SE) at 7.1 T magnetic field were 25–90 for the CH and 13–60 for the CH2 groups of 1-butene, corresponding to 0.2–0.6% and 0.1–0.4% lower boundary estimates for the percentages of pairwise hydrogen addition (φp). These values are typical for supported metal catalysts,24 and it should be emphasized that the actual contribution of pairwise hydrogen addition is likely higher due to the partial loss of polarization associated with relaxation effects and incomplete adiabaticity of gas transfer into a 7.1 T field.40 The difference in the estimated percentages of pairwise addition between CH and CH2 groups is explained by the different nuclear spin relaxation rates of these protons.
Temperature, °C | Flow rate, mL s−1 | X, % | S 1-butene, % | S 2-butene, % | S butane, % | SE (CH) | SE (CH2) | φ p (CH)a | φ p (CH2)a |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a The losses of polarization caused by relaxation on the way from the reactor to the NMR instrument and the incomplete adiabaticity of this transfer were not taken into account. The difference in the percentages of pairwise addition between the CH and CH2 groups is explained by different relaxation rates of these protons. | |||||||||
350 | 3.8 | 81 | 98.5 | 1.1 | 0.4 | 25 | 13 | 0.18 | 0.09 |
350 | 5.1 | 70 | 98 | 1.5 | 0.6 | 35 | 29 | 0.25 | 0.21 |
350 | 6.5 | 37 | 100 | 0 | 0 | 88 | 59 | 0.63 | 0.43 |
450 | 3.8 | 71 | 99 | 0.8 | 0.1 | 42 | 42 | 0.31 | 0.31 |
450 | 5.1 | 62 | 99 | 0.6 | 0.3 | 67 | 41 | 0.48 | 0.30 |
450 | 6.5 | 55 | 97 | 2.0 | 0.9 | 79 | 49 | 0.57 | 0.35 |
To assess the stability of the catalyst's performance, it was cooled down to room temperature under H2 atmosphere and tested in the hydrogenation of 1-butyne at 350 °C ca. 4.5 hours later. The activity of the catalyst decreased dramatically (1-butyne conversion decreased from 81 to 13%), however, a 4–5 fold increase in the SE and φp values was observed (Table S1†), indicating that the catalyst became less active but more selective in terms of pairwise hydrogen addition.
Next, the more selective catalyst,9 Cy3P–Cu/SiO2-700, was tested in the hydrogenation of 1-butyne with parahydrogen (Fig. 1d and e). Similar to Cu/SiO2-700, it showed hydrogenation activity only above 250 °C (Table S2†). Cy3P–Cu/SiO2-700 was significantly less active than Cu/SiO2-700 with conversion below 10%. However, it provided higher PHIP enhancements of the 1-butene NMR signals (ca. 3–6 fold compared to Cu/SiO2-700), and therefore is more prone to pairwise hydrogen addition, assuming that the presence of the ligand does not change the spin relaxation rates significantly. The maximum signal enhancement values were no less than 370 and the maximum contributions of pairwise hydrogen addition were no less than 2.7%, as observed at 350 °C and a 6.5 mL s−1 gas flow rate (Fig. S3, Table S2†). Note that as the signals of thermally polarized 1-butene were below the noise level, the SE and φp values were estimated using the signal-to-noise ratio as a reference. As was already mentioned above, losses of polarization due to relaxation and incomplete adiabaticity were not taken into account and therefore the actual SE and φp values can be significantly higher.
In order to gain further insight into the mechanism of the hydrogenation of 1-butyne on these Cu-based catalysts, hydrogenation of 1-butene with parahydrogen was also carried out. The unmodified Cu/SiO2-700 catalyst initially showed substantial activity in both the isomerization of 1-butene to 2-butene and hydrogenation to butane even at 150 °C (Table S4†). However, in a short time (∼2–4 min) its activity decreased dramatically (Table S4†). In contrast, the catalyst performance was stable at higher temperatures (250–450 °C). As can be seen from Table S4,† the catalyst was more active in isomerization than in hydrogenation. This activity in the hydrogenation of alkenes to alkanes agrees well with the behavior usually observed in the batch hydrogenation of alkynes, where olefins (primary products) get consumed as soon as there is no more alkyne in the reaction mixture.9,41 It is worth noting that no PHIP effects were observed in the hydrogenation of 1-butene on Cu/SiO2-700 (Fig. S5†). This observation is in a sharp contrast with the semihydrogenation of 1-butyne under similar reaction conditions and signifies that mechanistic pathways for the hydrogenation of alkynes and alkenes on supported Cu nanoparticles are different.
Similarly, Cy3P–Cu/SiO2-700 was tested in the hydrogenation of 1-butene. The catalyst did not show any considerable activity in the isomerization or hydrogenation of 1-butene in the 150–550 °C temperature range. This result demonstrates that modification of Cu/SiO2-700 with PCy3 indeed makes it a very selective catalyst toward hydrogenation of CC triple bonds, consistent with the high selectivity to olefins featured by Cy3P–Cu/SiO2-700 in the liquid phase batch alkyne semihydrogenation.9 Note, however, that Cy3P–Cu/SiO2-700 shows slightly higher activity than Cu/SiO2-700 in the semihydrogenation of 1-phenyl-1-propyne at 40 °C in toluene solution,9 in contrast with the substantially higher activity of Cu/SiO2-700 under the flow conditions utilized in this study. This difference is possibly due to the very different reaction conditions (gas vs. liquid phase and temperatures).
Since hydrogenation of terminal and internal alkynes can proceed via different mechanisms, Cu/SiO2-700 was tested in the hydrogenation of 2-butyne with p-H2. Significant activity in the formation of 2-butene and butane was observed starting at 250 °C (see Table S6† for conversions). The catalyst was selective toward 2-butene, but also produced some amounts of butane at 250 and 350 °C. No PHIP effects were observed in 2-butyne hydrogenation over the Cu/SiO2-700 catalyst. Similarly, the Cy3P–Cu/SiO2-700 catalyst showed significant activity above 250 °C. The catalyst was highly selective toward 2-butene (>95%) and in this case, no butane was formed (Table S7†). Then the temperature was increased to 300 °C. At the very first moment at 300 °C and a 6.5 mL s−1 gas flow rate, some catalytic activity was observed in the hydrogenation of 2-butyne to 2-butene (Fig. S8,† red trace). Unfortunately, the catalyst rapidly deactivated at the reaction temperature, as evidenced by a rapid decrease in the signals of 2-butene (see Fig. S8,† blue trace) that occurred within minutes. Any PHIP effects, if present, were very small. Interestingly, hydrogenation of 2-butyne over more common heterogeneous hydrogenation catalysts such as Pd/TiO2 and Rh/TiO2 featured pronounced PHIP effects for 2-butene and butane (Fig. S9†).30
Thus, it was found that treatment of the Cu/SiO2-700 catalyst with PCy3 leads to a significant increase in selectivity toward the formation of alkenes in the flow semihydrogenation of alkynes. Moreover, the modified catalyst provided a higher intensity of PHIP effects pointing to a higher contribution of pairwise hydrogen addition with this material (Scheme 1). These results can tentatively be explained by the selective binding of the PCy3 ligand to more active but unselective Cu surface sites, which in turn can impede the migration of hydrogen atoms, making pairwise addition of hydrogen more probable. A significant increase in the chemoselectivity of hydrogenation at the expense of catalytic activity confirms this hypothesis, as such an effect is typically observed with ligand-induced catalyst poisoning in heterogeneous catalysis.
Scheme 1 Non-pairwise and pairwise routes of hydrogen addition to 1-butyne over Cu/SiO2-700 and Cy3P–Cu/SiO2-700 catalysts. |
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Additional NMR spectra and data on conversion, NMR signal enhancements and percentages of pairwise hydrogen addition. See DOI: 10.1039/c6sc05276b |
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