Exceptional Selectivity to Olefins in the Deoxygenation of Fatty Acids over an Intermetallic Platinum-Zinc Alloy.
Zihao ZhangJinshu TianYubing LuXin GouJunrui LiWenda HuWenwen LinR Soyoung KimJie FuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Direct deoxygenation of long-chain fatty acids can produce both saturated alkanes (C n H 2n+2 ) and unsaturated olefins (C n H 2n ). However, the selectivity for the production of olefins via the decarbonylation route is relatively low because of the more favorable decarboxylation pathway. We present an atomically ordered intermetallic PtZn alloy on carbon catalyst (PtZn/C) with a record-high total selectivity (97 %) for undecane (C 11 H 24 ) and undecene (C 11 H 22 ) in the deoxygenation of lauric acid (C 12 H 24 O 2 ). Interestingly, the selectivity for C 11 H 22 is as high as 67.0 % on PtZn/C, which is significantly higher than that of 27.5 % obtained on the Pt/C counterpart under the same reaction conditions. Characterization and theoretical calculation results reveal that the intermetallic PtZn alloy not only inhibits the decarboxylation route by increasing the energy barrier of -COO* cleavage, but also facilitates the decarbonylation route by decreasing CO desorption energy, and therefore the major product is switched from alkanes to olefins.