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Ultrafine Ruthenium Clusters Shell-Embedded Hollow Carbon Spheres as Nanoreactors for Channel Microenvironment-Modulated Furfural Tandem Hydrogenation.

Zhihao YuNa JiJian XiongYou HanXiaoyun LiRui ZhangYina QiaoMing ZhangXuebin Lu
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Rationally modulating the catalytic microenvironment is important for targeted induction of specific molecular behaviors to fulfill complicated catalytic purposes. Herein, a metal pre-chelating assisted assembly strategy is developed to facilely synthesize the hollow carbon spheres with ultrafine ruthenium clusters embedded in pore channels of the carbon shell (Ru@Shell-HCSs), which can be employed as nanoreactors with preferred electronic and geometric catalytic microenvironments for the efficient tandem hydrogenation of biomass-derived furfural toward 2-methylfuran. The channel-embedding structure is proved to confer the ultrafine ruthenium clusters with an electron-deficient property via a reinforced interfacial charge transfer mechanism, which prompts the hydrogenolysis of intermediate furfuryl alcohol during the tandem reaction, thus resulting in an enhanced 2-methylfuran generation. Meanwhile, lengthening the shell pore channel can offer reactant molecules with a prolonged diffusion path, and correspondingly a longer retention time in the channel, thereafter delivering an accelerated tandem hydrogenation progression. This paper aims to present a classic case that emphasizes the critical role of precisely controlling the catalytic microenvironment of the metal-loaded hollow nanoreactors in coping with the arduous challenges from multifunctional catalyst-driven complex tandem reactions.
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