Title of article :
Hydrodehalogenation of haloarenes over Silica supported Pd and Ni: A consideration of catalytic activity/selectivity and haloarene reactivity Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Mark A Keane، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
The gas phase catalytic hydrodehalogenation of haloarenes (423 K ≤ T ≤ 593 K) is presented as a viable means of treating hazardous concentrated halogenated gas streams for the recovery/reuse of valuable chemical feedstock, i.e. a progressive green processing strategy. The action of a Ni/SiO2 and Pd/SiO2 of comparable metal loading (ca. 5% w/w) was compared where the Pd catalyst delivered specific hydrodehalogenation activities that were up to three orders of magnitude greater. Reduction of Pd/SiO2 was far more facile to generate a supported zero valent phase that was characterized by a narrower distribution of smaller metal particles, delivering a (TEM derived) mean Pd particle diameter = 4.0 nm. Temperature programmed reduction (TPR) analysis of Ni/SiO2 demonstrated higher reduction temperature requirements (723 K as opposed to 523 K for Pd/SiO2) yielding an average Ni diameter = 9.3 nm. Hydrodehalogenation activity/selectivity is strongly dependent on the electron withdrawing/donation properties of the ring substituents where electron donation serves to activate the ring for hydrogen scission of the CX bond. Variations in isomer reactivity can be attributed to steric hindrance limitations. Lumping chloroarene isomers together, the following trend of decreasing hydrodechlorination rates is established: chlorophenol(s) > chlorotoluene(s) > chlorobenzene > dichlorophenol(s), trichlorophenol(s) > dichlorobenzene(s) > trichlorobenzene(s), bromochlorobenzene > pentachlorophenol > hexachlorobenzene. Compensation behavior is established for the dehalogenation of a range of haloarenes over Ni/SiO2, a response that is used to predict a feasible temperature for the treatment of a multi component haloarene feed.
Keywords :
Palladium/silica , Dehalogenation kinetics , Catalytic hydrodehalogenation , Haloarenes , Nickel/silica
Journal title :
Applied Catalysis A:General
Journal title :
Applied Catalysis A:General