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In Situ Anchoring of Small-Sized Silver Nanoparticles on Porphyrinic Triazine-Based Frameworks for the Conversion of CO 2 into α-Alkylidene Cyclic Carbonates with Outstanding Catalytic Activities under Ambient Conditions.

Yiying YangYingyin LiZixuan ZhangKechi ChenRongchang Luo
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
The preparation of catalytic hybrid materials by introducing highly dispersed metallic nanoparticles into porous organic polymers (POPs) may be an ideal and promising strategy for integrated CO 2 capture and conversion. In terms of the carboxylative cyclization of propargyl alcohols with CO 2 , the anchoring of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) on functional POPs to fabricate efficient heterogeneous catalysts is considered to be quite intriguing but remains challenging. In the contribution, well-dispersed AgNPs were successfully anchored onto the porphyrinic triazine-based frameworks by a simple "liquid impregnation and in situ reduction" strategy. The presence of N-rich dual active sites, porphyrin and triazine, which acted as the electron donor and acceptor, respectively, offered a huge opportunity for the nucleation and growth of metal nanoparticles. Significantly, the as-prepared catalyst Ag/TPP-CTF shows excellent catalytic activity (up to 99%) toward the carboxylative cyclization of propargyl alcohols with CO 2 at room temperature, achieving record-breaking activities (TOF up to 615 h -1 at 1 bar and 3077 h -1 at 10 bar). Moreover, the catalyst can be easily recovered and reused at least 10 times with retention of high catalytic activity. The possible mechanism involves small-sized AgNP-mediated alkyne activation, which may promote highly efficient and green conversion of CO 2 . This work paves the way for immobilizing metal nanoparticles onto functional POPs by surface structure changes for enhanced CO 2 catalysis.
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