WxC-β-SiC Nanocomposite Catalysts Used in Aqueous Phase Hydrogenation of Furfural.
Jacek RogowskiMariusz AndrzejczukJoanna BerlowskaMichal BinczarskiDorota KregielAndrzej KubiakMagdalena ModelskaElzbieta SzubiakiewiczAndrei StanishevskyJolanta TomaszewskaIzabela Alina WitonskaPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2017)
This study investigates the effects of the addition of tungsten on the structure, phase composition, textural properties and activities of β-SiC-based catalysts in the aqueous phase hydrogenation of furfural. Carbothermal reduction of SiO₂ in the presence of WO₃ at 1550 °C in argon resulted in the formation of WxC-β-SiC nanocomposite powders with significant variations in particle morphology and content of WxC-tipped β-SiC nano-whiskers, as revealed by TEM and SEM-EDS. The specific surface area (SSA) of the nanocomposite strongly depended on the amount of tungsten and had a notable impact on its catalytic properties for the production of furfuryl alcohol (FA) and tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol (THFA). Nanocomposite WxC-β-SiC catalysts with 10 wt % W in the starting mixture had the highest SSA and the smallest WxC crystallites. Some 10 wt % W nanocomposite catalysts demonstrated up to 90% yield of THFA, in particular in the reduction of furfural derived from biomass, although the reproducible performance of such catalysts has yet to be achieved.