Login / Signup

Grafted Polymethylhydrosiloxane on Hierarchically Porous Silica Monoliths: A New Path to Monolith-Supported Palladium Nanoparticles for Continuous Flow Catalysis Applications.

Carl-Hugo PélissonTakahiro NakanishiYang ZhuKei MorisatoToshiyuki KameiAyaka MaenoHironori KajiShunki MuroyamaMasamoto TafuKazuyoshi KanamoriToyoshi ShimadaKazuki Nakanishi
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2016)
Polymethylhydrosiloxane has been grafted on the surface of a hierarchically porous silica monolith using a facile catalytic reaction between Si-H and silanol to anchor the polymer. This easy methodology leads to the functionalization of the surface of a silica monolith, where a large amount of free Si-H bonds remain available for reducing metal ions in solution. Palladium nanoparticles of 15 nm have been synthesized homogeneously inside the mesopores of the monolith without any stabilizers, using a flow of a solution containing Pd2+. This monolith was used as column-type fixed bed catalyst for continuous flow hydrogenation of styrene and selective hydrogenation of 3-hexyn-1-ol, in each case without a significant decrease of the catalytic activity after several hours or days. Conversion, selectivity, and stereoselectivity of the alkyne hydrogenation can be tuned by flow rates of hydrogen and the substrate solution, leading to high productivity (1.57 mol g(Pd)-1 h-1) of the corresponding cis-alkene.
Keyphrases
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • metal organic framework
  • highly efficient
  • room temperature
  • visible light
  • quantum dots
  • climate change
  • gold nanoparticles
  • solid state
  • amino acid
  • solid phase extraction