Highly ordered Periodic Mesoporous Organosilica material containing the ionic 4,4-bipyridinium group and decorated with palladium nanoparticles: A proposal for nanoreactor
Cezar A. Didó, Carlos D.G. Caneppele, Douglas S. Charqueiro, Eliana W. de Menezes, Leliz T. Arenas, Tania M.H. Costa, Edilson V. Benvenutti, Marcelo P. Gil
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
A Periodic Mesoporous Organosilica (PMO) containing the cationic 4,4-bipyridinium group, presenting 0.25 mmol g−1 that corresponds to 11.5 w/w%, was successfully prepared. This material was designed to have the ionic group acting as anchoring agent of PdCl42- anion complex, in a much lower amount than the available cationic sites (3 and 15 molar%). Subsequently, the palladium complex was in situ reduced to obtain stabilized palladium nanoparticles (PdNP). The ensemble of characterization results showed that the PMO material walls have a cylindrical morphology with hexagonal packing, generating well-ordered pores with a narrow size distribution and high surface area, even after being decorated with PdNP. This material is a candidate to be an efficient nanoreactor considering that it contains spatial uniformity in its chemical sites and confined environment. Aiming to evaluate the availability of palladium sites, the material was used as a catalyst in the reduction of p-nitrophenol model reaction. Although the catalyst of the present study has a comparable activity with other already reported systems, it presents the impressive lowest molar palladium/p-nitrophenol ratio found in literature.
期刊介绍:
Catalysis Today focuses on the rapid publication of original invited papers devoted to currently important topics in catalysis and related subjects. The journal only publishes special issues (Proposing a Catalysis Today Special Issue), each of which is supervised by Guest Editors who recruit individual papers and oversee the peer review process. Catalysis Today offers researchers in the field of catalysis in-depth overviews of topical issues.
Both fundamental and applied aspects of catalysis are covered. Subjects such as catalysis of immobilized organometallic and biocatalytic systems are welcome. Subjects related to catalysis such as experimental techniques, adsorption, process technology, synthesis, in situ characterization, computational, theoretical modeling, imaging and others are included if there is a clear relationship to catalysis.