A Nanoarchitecture Based on Silver and Copper Oxide with an Exceptional Response in the Chlorine-Promoted Epoxidation of Ethylene.
Adrian RamirezJose L HuesoHugo SuarezReyes MalladaAlfonso IbarraSilvia IrustaJesus SantamariaPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2016)
The selective oxidation of ethylene to ethylene epoxide is highly challenging as a result of competing reaction pathways leading to the deep oxidation of both ethylene and ethylene oxide. Herein we present a novel catalyst based on silver and copper oxide with an excellent response in the selective oxidation pathway towards ethylene epoxide. The catalyst is composed of different silver nanostructures dispersed on a tubular copper oxide matrix. This type of hybrid nanoarchitecture seems to facilitate the accommodation of chlorine promoters, leading to high yields at low reaction temperatures. The stability after the addition of chlorine promoters implies a substantial improvement over the industrial practice: a single pretreatment step at ambient pressure suffices in contrast with the common practice of continuously feeding organochlorinated precursors during the reaction.
Keyphrases
- gold nanoparticles
- oxide nanoparticles
- drinking water
- healthcare
- primary care
- hydrogen peroxide
- electron transfer
- magnetic resonance
- air pollution
- room temperature
- silver nanoparticles
- highly efficient
- ionic liquid
- particulate matter
- quality improvement
- heavy metals
- nitric oxide
- carbon dioxide
- risk assessment
- endothelial cells
- high glucose