Content area

Abstract

A combination of the advantages of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis could enable the development of sustainable catalysts with novel reactivity and selectivity. Although heterogeneous catalysts are often recycled more easily than their homogeneous counterparts, they can be difficult to apply in traditional organic reactions and modification of their properties towards a desired reactivity is, at best, complex. In contrast, tuning the properties of homogeneous catalysts by, for example, modifying the ligands that coordinate a metal centre is better understood. Here, using olefin cyclopropanation reactions catalysed by dendrimer-encapsulated Au nanoclusters as examples, we demonstrate that changing the dendrimer properties allows the catalytic reactivity to be tuned in a similar fashion to ligand modification in a homogeneous catalyst. Furthermore, we show that these heterogeneous catalysts employed in a fixed-bed flow reactor allow fine control over the residence time of the reactants and thus enables the control over product distribution in a way that is not easily available for homogeneous catalysts.

Details

Title
Control of selectivity in heterogeneous catalysis by tuning nanoparticle properties and reactor residence time
Author
Gross, Elad 1 ; Jack Hung-Chang Liu 1 ; Toste, F Dean 1 ; Somorjai, Gabor A 1 

 Chemical Sciences Division, California and Department of Chemistry, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA 
Pages
947-952
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Nov 2012
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
17554330
e-ISSN
17554349
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2316779499
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Nov 2012