Issue 26, 2016

Looking inside the pores of a MCM-41 based Mo heterogeneous styrene oxidation catalyst: an inelastic neutron scattering study

Abstract

Styrene oxidation mediated by a Mo-based mesoporous catalyst can yield selectively styrene oxide or benzaldehyde. Kinetic data evidenced that styrene oxide is the initial single-product formed by the catalytic Mo-mediated process. However, after some hours of reaction benzaldehyde yield rises while that of the epoxide decreases concomitantly. The mechanistic proposal pointed to a surface assisted acid–base mechanism by which styrene oxide is interconverted into benzaldehyde through over-oxidation and cleavage of the C–C bond and releases formaldehyde as well. In an attempt to gain some insight into whether this mechanistic proposal is realistic we have conducted a combined DRIFT and inelastic neutron scattering (INS) study to assess the adsorbed species at the catalyst's surface and confirm the mechanistic proposal. INS and DRIFT provided complementary insight into surface-adsorbed species by probing donor (INS) and acceptor (DRIFT) species. INS also allowed for an estimation of product selectivity by means of a Job method stressing the power of the technique.

Graphical abstract: Looking inside the pores of a MCM-41 based Mo heterogeneous styrene oxidation catalyst: an inelastic neutron scattering study

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Feb 2016
Accepted
13 Apr 2016
First published
13 Apr 2016

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2016,18, 17272-17280

Author version available

Looking inside the pores of a MCM-41 based Mo heterogeneous styrene oxidation catalyst: an inelastic neutron scattering study

C. I. Fernandes, S. Rudić, P. D. Vaz and C. D. Nunes, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2016, 18, 17272 DOI: 10.1039/C6CP01243D

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