Hydrodeoxygenation of fatty acids and triglycerides by Pt-loaded Nb2O5 catalysts
Abstract
Platinum nanoparticles loaded onto various supports have been studied for the selective hydrogenation of lauric acid to n-dodecane. The activity depends on the support material and pre-reduction temperature. Pt/Nb2O5 reduced at 300 °C gives the highest activity. Pt/Nb2O5 shows higher activity than various Nb2O5-supported transition metals (Ir, Re, Ru, Pd, Cu, Ni). Under solvent-free conditions Pt/Nb2O5 is effective for the hydrodeoxygenation of lauric, capric, palmitic, myristic, oleic, and stearic acids under 8 bar H2 at 180–250 °C, which gives high yields (88–100%) of linear alkanes with the same chain length as the starting compound. Tristearin is also converted to give 93% yield of n-octadecane. Pt/Nb2O5 shows more than 60 times higher turnover number (TON) than the previously reported catalysts for the hydrogenation of stearic acid to n-octadecane. Mechanistic study shows a consecutive reaction pathway in which lauric acid is hydrogenated to 1-dodecanol, which undergoes esterification with lauric acid as well as hydrogenation to n-dodecane. The ester undergoes hydrogenolysis to give the alcohol, which is hydrogenated to the alkane. Infrared (IR) study of acetic acid adsorption on Nb2O5 indicates that Lewis acid–base interaction of Nb cation and carbonyl oxygen, which suggests a possible role of Nb2O5 as an activation site of carbonyl groups during hydrodeoxygenation.