Cuiping Li*,
Yue Zhao,
Tianwen Zhu,
Yan'ge Li,
Jiajia Ruan and
Guanghui Li
School of Chemical Science and Technology, Key Laboratory of Medicinal Chemistry for Natural Resource, Ministry of Education, Yunnan University, Kunming 650091, China. E-mail: licp830@iccas.ac.cn; Fax: +86 871 6503 1567
First published on 19th April 2018
One dimensional mesoporous etched halloysite nanotube supported Co2+ is achieved by selective etching of Al2O3 from halloysite nanotube (HA) and immersing the etched HA (eHA) into the Co(NO3)2·6H2O solution consecutively. By facilely tuning the etching time and the weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to eHA, the morphology, specific surface area and the supported Co2+ content of the mesoporous material can be tuned. The method for mesoporous material is scaled up and can be extended to other clay minerals. The mesoporous eHA supported Co2+ is used as catalyst for the selective catalytic oxidation of cyclohexene in solvent-free reaction system with O2 as oxidant. The results shows the catalytic activity is dependent on etching time, weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to eHA, calcination treatment and reaction time/temperature. Among them, mesoporous eHA supported Co2+ prepared with 18 h etching time and 2:1 Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio without calcination (HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1) demonstrates the highest catalytic activity under 75 °C reaction temperature and 18 h reaction time (58.30% conversion and 94.03% selectivity to allylic products). Furthermore, HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 has exhibit superior cycling stability with 37.69% conversion and 92.73% selectivity to allylic products after three cycles.
On the other hand, halloysite nanotube is a type of natural occurring clay minerals with nanotubular structures and consists of two-layered aluminosilicate with a chemical composition of Al2Si2O5(OH)4·nH2O).16 Its structure and chemical composition is similar to that of kaolinite, dickite or nacrite except for the unit clay layers are separated by a monolayer of water molecules.17 Compared to other supports, halloysite nanotube has the advantage of abundant reserves, high porosity and excellent chemical stability, which is usually utilized as an attractive support for catalyst.18–27 In our previous studies,24 it has been demonstrated that mesoporous SiO2 and SiO2/Al2O3 can been controlled synthesized in large scale by selective etching of the interior Al2O3 from hydrophobically modified halloysite nanotube or halloysite nanotubes by HCl. As the selective etching by HCl is the positive charged Al2O3, the surface of the etched halloysite nanotubes should be negative charged and can induce the adsorption of metal cation to achieve mesoporous etched halloysite nanotubes supported metal ions. Although mesoporous material supported metal cation has already been used in cyclohexene oxidation, mostly involves in supported metal compounds and complicated modification/treatment before supporting. And it is usually conducted with toxic, volatile solvent and expensive oxidant.12–15 For all we know, the influence of etching time, weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to etched HA (eHA) in the fabrication on the cyclohexene oxidation activity of mesoporous eHA supported Co2+ (eHA@Co2+), especially the environment-friendly cyclohexene oxidation process (solvent-free, O2 as oxidant and only bubbling with O2 a few minutes before oxidation reaction) and effective catalytic activity (58.30% conversion and 94.03% selectivity to allylic products) have rarely been reported.
In this study, the mesoporous eHA supported Co2+ (eHA@Co2+) are prepared through HCl selective etching and in situ Co2+ adsorption, consecutively. By simply tuning the etching time and feeding amount of Co2+ in the preparation, mesoporous eHA@Co2+ with different BET specific surface area and Co2+ content can be achieved. The influence of catalyst (etching time, feeding amount of Co2+ and calcination in the preparation) and reaction condition (reaction time/temperature, solvent and oxidant) on the cyclohexene selective oxidation of mesoporous eHA@Co2+ are investigated in detail. In addition, the cycling stability of eHA@Co2+ is also investigated. In line with the results, a mechanism for cyclohexene oxidation is proposed.
Fig. 1 TEM images of halloysite nanotubes after being etched by HCl at 80 °C for (a) 6 h, (b) 7.5 h, (c) 11 h and (d) 18 h, respectively. |
FT-IR is further used to characterize the eHA. Along increasing the etching time, the bands intensity of the Al2OH-stretching (3696 and 3620 cm−1) and the single Al2OH-bending (912 cm−1) gradually decrease (Fig. 2).16,24,28 In addition, the bands intensity of Si–O–Al in plane bending mode (754, 692 and 534 cm−1) also show the same trend with the increase of etching time (along further etching). Correspondingly, SiO–H vibrations band at 3200–3700 cm−1 appears (the formation of silica) and the band intensity of symmetric Si–O–Si stretching (798 cm−1) increases with the etching time. The above result demonstrates the removal of Al2O3 can be controlled.24,28,29 Eventually, all the Al2O3 characteristic bands disappear (trace e, Fig. 2). The Si–O stretching band of halloysite nanotubes (1032 cm−1) completely disappears accompanied by the enhance of the in-plane Si–O–Si deformation peak (1092 cm−1) and the final spectra bear a resemblance to that of amorphous SiO2.30 The eHA is further characterized by XRD and EDX. It demonstrates the single 1:1 layer aluminosilicate thickness (7.30 Å), other typical reflections of halloysite (4.41 Å, 3.61 Å, 2.49 Å, 2.36 Å, 2.22 Å, 1.68 Å, 1.48 Å) (Fig. S2 in ESI†) and Al/Si atom ratio (Table S1 in ESI†) decrease with etching time, and eventually disappear with a broad band peak present which is attributed to amorphous SiO2 for XRD and to nearly zero for Al/Si atom ratio, respectively. The above results are consistent with the result of HCl selective etching of octadecyltrichlorosilane silane (C18) modified halloysite nanotube.24
Fig. 2 FT-IR of halloysite nanotubes (a) and halloysite nanotubes after being etched by HCl at 80 °C for (b) 6 h, (c) 7.5 h, (d) 11 h and (e) 18 h, respectively. |
The mesoporous structure of eHA is characterized by nitrogen adsorption–desorption. It exhibits clearly halloysite nanotube itself is a mesoporous material (Fig. 3). In addition, according to the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) classification (Fig. 3, Table S2 in ESI†), the adsorption–desorption isotherm of halloysite nanotubes is ascribed to type IV with H3 hysteresis loops as majority of the pore diameter were in the range of 2–8 nm and 15–35 nm.31 The average pore diameter, pore volume and BET surface area of halloysite nanotubes are respectively 11.5 nm, 0.16 cm3 g−1 and 31.7 cm2 g−1. Compared with those of halloysite nanotubes, the pore volume of eHA is higher and the pore diameter is lower (Fig. 3B, Table S2 in ESI†) when the etching time is lower than 18 h and an opposite situation is observed when the etching time is 18 h (Fig. 3B, Table S2 in ESI†). After selective etching, mesopores in the sizes of 3.0 nm observed in the parent halloysite nanotubes has shifted to larger size, especially for the HA/HCl-18 h sample (has shifted to 5.4 nm), while the pores about 14 nm has shifted to higher position or has disappeared. This indicates that the cavity in the eHA has been partly destroyed or completely disappeared, which is in good agreement with the results of the TEM images. What is deserved to mention that the BET surface area is increased evidently from 31.7 m2 g−1 for the halloysite nanotube to 176.5 m2 g−1 for the HA/HCl-6 h sample. However, with further increasing the etching time, the increase of BET surface area is not significant, for example, with the etching time increase from 6 h to 18 h, the BET surface area just increases to 228.4 m2 g−1 from 176.5 m2 g−1 (Table S2 in ESI†). The raise of the BET surface area of eHA could be resulted from the selective etching of Al2O3 from halloysite nanotubes, which will increase surface roughness and porosity (Fig. 3). It also can be seen with the increase of etching time, the average pore diameter and pore volume of the eHA also increase, implying they can be conditioned by the etching time. As an example, with the increase of etching time from 6 h to 18 h, the average pore diameter and pore volume, respectively, increase from 6.8 nm to 12.0 nm and 0.56 cm3 g−1 to 0.87 cm3 g−1.
Fig. 3 Nitrogen adsorption–desorption isotherms (A) and pore size distribution curves (B) of halloysite (HA) and HA/HCl-T. |
The above mesoporous eHA is used to support Co2+ by an impregnation method and marked as HA/HCl-T/Co2+-R, wherein R represent the weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to eHA. Fig. 4 shows the TEM of HA/HCl-18 h after immerging in different concentration of Co(NO3)2·6H2O solution. It is demonstrable that the rough/porous structure of HA/HCl-18 h is not affected. Moreover, there are 2.5 nm black spots on eHA and the amount increases with the increase of weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to HA/HCl-18 h (Fig. 4, Table S3 in ESI†). We ascribe them to the Co2+ ionic clusters. The Co content of the HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-R is roughly determined by EDX. The FT-IR of eHA@Co2+ has no significant difference from that of eHA (Fig. S3 in ESI†). The above results indicate Co2+ can be supported on the eHA by the impregnation method and the supported amount of Co2+ can be tuned by the feeding amount of weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to HA/HCl-18 h in the preparation. It's hard to ignore that the Al/Si atom ratio and Co content (wt%) determined by EDX are not accurate as there are many factors affecting the EDX test result, for example the flatness/concentrations of sample, the distribution of elements, accelerating voltage of SEM and so on. However, EDX can be used to present the change trend of the Al/Si atom ratio and Co content with the increase of etching time and the weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to eHA, respectively.
Fig. 4 TEM images of eHA@Co2+: (a) HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-0.5:1, (b) HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-1:1, (c) HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 and (d) HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-4:1. |
Catalyst | Selectivity (%) | Conversion (%) | TONa | rwb(mmol g−1 h) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reaction conditions: 40 mg catalyst, 0.8 mL cyclohexene, O2 (10 min), 75 °C, 18 h.a TON (turnover number) is defined as total mol of cyclohexene molecules converted per mol of catalyst.b Initial reaction rate of cyclohexene consumption normalized by catalyst mass.c The added amount of Co(NO3)2·6H2O is 1.1 mg, comparable to the amount of Co in 40 mg HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1.d Reaction conditions: 20 mg catalyst, 1.23 mL cyclohexene, 2.5 mL H2O2, 70 °C, 24 h (ref. 27).e Reaction conditions: 50 mg catalyst, 5 mL cyclohexene, oxygen balloon, 80 °C, 20 h (ref. 6). | |||||||
HA | 0 | 5.52 | 59.74 | 34.74 | 1.63 | — | — |
HA/Co2+-2:1 | 0 | 10.76 | 45.86 | 43.38 | 9.58 | — | — |
HA/HCl-6 h/Co2+-2:1 | 0 | 5.10 | 69.02 | 25.88 | 10.49 | — | — |
HA/HCl-7.5 h/Co2+-2:1 | 0 | 8.97 | 53.36 | 37.66 | 16.82 | — | — |
HA/HCl-11 h/Co2+-2:1 | 0.45 | 5.14 | 65.57 | 28.84 | 23.92 | — | — |
HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 | 0.27 | 5.70 | 54.60 | 39.43 | 58.30 | 1209.98 | 1140.69 |
HA/HCl-18 h | 1.51 | 0 | 59.17 | 39.31 | 9.30 | — | — |
HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-0.5:1 | 3.34 | 1.10 | 51.73 | 43.83 | 18.33 | 1065.20 | 1004.20 |
HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-1:1 | 3.50 | 4.88 | 49.16 | 42.46 | 26.63 | 644.80 | 607.88 |
HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-4:1 | 1.09 | 4.70 | 60.68 | 33.53 | 29.27 | 507.74 | 478.67 |
HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-1:1 | 1.10 | 8.76 | 49.22 | 40.93 | 19.21 | — | — |
HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-2:1 | 2.05 | 17.95 | 54.22 | 25.77 | 29.06 | — | — |
HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-4:1 | 0.82 | 7.48 | 60.02 | 31.68 | 22.51 | — | — |
Co(NO3)2·6H2Oc | 5.40 | 3.52 | 60.87 | 30.20 | 13.59 | 282.05 | 265.90 |
Catalyst-free | 5.20 | 50.34 | 14.68 | 29.78 | 8.13 | — | — |
Halloysite nanotubes supported PANI (PANI@HA/1 M/2.04-HCl)d | 0 | 99.50 | 0.05 | 0.45 | 98.17 | 148.66 | 67.33 |
Co(II)-containing metal–organic frameworkse | 3.05 | 0 | 51.26 | 39.34 | 32.80 | 80.22 | 68.07 |
For the effect of weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to eHA in the preparation, when the weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to eHA is between 0.5:1–2:1 (Table 1, Fig. S4 in ESI†), cyclohexene conversion increases with the increase of Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio, and then when the Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio is in the range of 2:1–4:1, the cyclohexene conversion decreases with the increase of Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio. An optimal Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio in the fabrication is 2:1. The effect of Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio on the conversion is attributed to a cooperative effect of Co content and Co2+ dispersion on the eHA. Combined with the EDX result that the Co content increases with the increase of Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio (Table S3 in ESI†), the cyclohexene oxidation efficiency of HA/HCl-T/Co2+-R will be affected by the Co content in the mesoporous eHA@Co2+ (Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio in the preparation). It is deserved to mention that the cyclohexene conversion, TON and rw of HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 are higher than those of the bulk Co(NO3)2·6H2O (Entry 6, 14, Table 1) at the equivalent amount of Co, indicating the porous structure of HA/HCl-18 h can well disperse Co2+. About the selectivity, the main oxidation products are allylic products (2-cyclohexen-1-one and 2-cyclohexen-1-ol) and the selectivity to allylic products accounts for more than 90%.
Furthermore, as the chemical composition of HA is Al2Si2O5(OH)4·nH2O), the SiO2 in HA can be selectively etched by NaOH. The sample etched by NaOH for 18 h (HA/NaOH-18 h) is used to support Co2+ with 1:1, 2:1 and 4:1 weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to HA/NaOH-18 h. It still shows the optimal weight ratio is 2:1, which achieves 29.06% cyclohexene conversion. For the oxidation product of HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-R, it is still allylic product (the selectivity is higher than 79%). However, the catalytic activity of HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-R is lower than that of HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-R at the same weight ratio of Co(NO3)2·6H2O to eHA, indicating HA/HCl-T can support more Co2+ owing to the negative charged of SiO2 in HA/HCl-T.
Notably, the selectivity to allylic product of cyclohexene oxidation catalyzed by HA/HCl-T/Co2+-R exceeds 90%, independence on the etching time and Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio in the preparation, which will simplify the later purification and separation. The cyclohexene conversion and selectivity to allylic products (2-cyclohexen-1-one and 2-cyclohexen-1-ol) with HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 as catalyst are 58.30% and 94.03% respectively, indicating it can selectively oxidize cyclohexene to allylic products. Both of the cyclohexene conversion and selectivity to allylic products are higher than that of Co(II)-containing MOFs (Co-MOF, 32.80% conversion and 90.80% selectivity to allylic products), even both the reaction temperature (75 °C) and time (18 h) are lower than that of Co(II)-containing MOFs (80 °C and 20 h) and the simplification of oxidation process (only bubbled with O2 for 10 min before reaction; during the reaction, no O2 is bubbled or O2 balloon is added).6 Based on the above results, the etching time and Co(NO3)2·6H2O/eHA weight ratio in the preparation will exert a significant impact on the cyclohexene oxidation efficiency of HA/HCl-T/Co2+-R. Thereinto, HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 performs the highest catalytic efficiency, corresponding to a 1209.98 TON and 1140.69 mmol g−1 h−1 mass-normalized activity. This activity is significantly higher than that of halloysite nanotubes supported PANI (PANI@HA/1 M/2.04-HCl, 148.66 TON and 67.33 mmol g−1 h−1)27 and Co(II)-containing metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) (Co-MOF, 80.22 TON and 68.07 mmol g−1 h−1).6 So HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 is an effective catalyst for allylic oxidation of cyclohexene and chosen for further studies.
Furthermore, the effect of calcinations on the cyclohexene catalytic oxidation activity of HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 and HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-2:1 is investigated. HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 and HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-2:1 are treated at 550 °C for 6 h, cited as HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1/550 °C-6 h and HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-2:1/550 °C-6 h, respectively (Entry 2 and 4, Table S4 in ESI†). And they are used as catalyst and compared with those without calcinations (Entry 1 and 3, Table S4 in ESI†). It is demonstrable calcinations will decrease the catalytic activity of HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1, whereas it has a positive effect on HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-2:1. It can be explained by the fact calcinations will lead to the aggregation of Co2+ or cobalt oxide for HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 owing to the adsorption saturation of Co2+ on HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1, whereas it will solid the adsorbed Co2+ on HA/NaOH-18 h/Co2+-2:1 because NaOH etching will lead to partly positive charged Al2O3, which will produce electrostatic repulsion to Co2+. Therefore, HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 is selected for optimization of reaction condition.
In the next, optimization of reaction condition (such as oxidant, solvent, reaction time and reaction temperature) for cyclohexene oxidation by HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 is further undergoing. At first, the effect of oxidant on cyclohexene oxidation is investigated. Considering environmentally-friendly aspect, O2 and 30% H2O2 are chosen as oxidant. The detailed result is shown on Table S5.† It is clearly when bubbling O2 for 10 min before oxidation, cyclohexene conversion achieves 58.30%; whereas without bubbling O2, the conversion is only 10.41%. Combined with 10.41% cyclohexene conversion of HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 without bubbling O2 (Entry 2, Table S5 in ESI†) and 9.30% cyclohexene conversion with HA/HCl-18 h as catalyst and O2 as oxidant (Entry 7, Table 1), we conclude that the role of Co in HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 should be catalysized O2 to achieve active oxygen species. Whereas, with H2O2 as oxidant, the cyclohexene conversion is very low, only 25.70% and the main oxidation product is 1,2-cyclohexandiol (98.70% selectivity), demonstrating under O2 and 30% H2O2, cyclohexene oxidation catalyzed by HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1 undergoes different pathway. Considering the facilitation of later purification and allylic products as the main oxidation with O2 as oxidant, O2 is selected as oxidant in the current catalytic reaction system.27
In the following, the effect of solvent (CH3CN, CH2Cl2, THF, DMF, n-heptane and acetic anhydride) on the selective oxidation of cyclohexene is investigated and compared with the solvent-free reaction system. Noting: the volume of solvent is six times (4.8 mL) the volume of cyclohexene (0.8 mL) to avoid the evaporation of cyclohexene in the oxidation process. The result is in Table S6.† It is obvious the catalytic efficiency of the solvent-free reaction system is higher when compared with the solvent reaction system (58.30% cyclohexene conversion and 94.03% allylic products selectivity). It can also be observed that high polar solvents (acetic anhydride and DMF) can result in the selectivity to allylic products (57.70% and 76.70% for acetic anhydride and DMF, respectively) decreasing and accompany the selectivity to epoxy cyclohexane (20.00% for DMF) and 1,2-cyclohexanediol (41.80% for acetic anhydride) increasing (Table S6 in ESI†). It could be under the high polar solvent, the epoxy cyclohexene and 1,2-cyclohexanediol can easily desorb from the catalyst, thus facilitating the formation of epoxy cyclohexene and 1,2-cyclohexanediol.27,32
Other reaction condition, for example, the effect of reaction temperature (20–80 °C) and reaction time (0–24 h) is further investigated. It shows that the cyclohexene conversion increases significantly with the increase of reaction temperature when the reaction temperature is in the range of 20–75 °C and the conversion achieves 58.30% with 94.03% allylic products selectivity when the reaction temperature is 75 °C (Fig. S5 and Table S7 in ESI†). The increase of catalytic efficiency with the reaction temperature may be ascribed to the fact high temperature can afford sufficient energy for selective oxidation of cyclohexene.27 Then the cyclohexene conversion increases indistinctly when the cyclohexene oxidation is conducted at 80 °C. So 75 °C is selected as reaction temperature in the following studies. It is worth mentioning the selectivity to allylic products stays at a high level (>90%) when the reaction temperature is at 20–80 °C. For the effect of reaction time, when the reaction time is 6 h, the conversion is only 18.84%; nevertheless when the reaction time is 18 h, the conversion quickly increases to 58.30%; with further increasing the reaction time, the conversion increases slightly (Fig. 5, Table S8 in ESI†). And the selectivity to allylic products is higher than 89% within 6–24 h reaction time, indicating during the oxidation process, the main oxidation products are allylic products. So the reaction time is fixed at 18 h for cyclohexene oxidation.
Fig. 5 The effect of reaction time on the cyclohexene conversion and selectivity of HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-2:1. |
Scheme 1 Proposed mechanism of cyclohexene selective oxidation to allylic product (2-cyclohexen-1-one and 2-cyclohexen-1-ol) with mesoporous eHA@Co2+ as catalyst. |
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Data of HA, eHA and eHA@Co2+; effect of reaction condition on cyclohexene oxidation and recycling stability study with HA/HCl-18 h/Co2+-R as catalyst. See DOI: 10.1039/c7ra11245a |
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