500-22-1Relevant articles and documents
V2O5/TiO2 Catalysts for the Vapor-Phase Oxidation of β-Picoline: Influence of the TiO2-Carrier
Heinz,Hoelderich,Krill,Boeck,Huthmacher
, p. 1 - 10 (2000)
The heterogeneously catalyzed vapor-phase oxidation of β-picoline to nicotinic acid over a series of V2O5/TiO2 was investigated. Characterizations of the catalysts were carried out using X-ray diffraction, temperature-programmed desorption, and N2-adsorption. It was found that the use of an anatase type of TiO2-carrier with a higher BET surface area enhances the activity of the V/Ti-oxide catalyst enormously. TiO2-materials with different BET surface areas (between 10 and 270 m2/g) were used. Since these different materials originate from different processes, namely, the chloride and the sulfate process, the influence of the sulfate content was investigated. Additionally, the use of different TiO2 crystalline structures (anatase vs rutile) was evaluated, and a sulfate-free TiO2-material was modified with sulfate and cerium oxide during vanadia impregnation. The results of these experiments verified that the sulfate content itself did not have a strong influence on the catalyst activity. XRD-characterization of the catalysts demonstrated that only the TiO2 and the V2O5 phase could be detected. This corresponds with other investigations in the literature and strengthens the assumption that there is a synergetic effect of a V2O5 layer supported by TiO2 as a catalyst carrier. Therefore the increase of the interface between these two crystalline phases is the determining factor to improve the catalyst's activity.
Selective photocatalytic oxidation of 3-pyridinemethanol on platinized acid/base modified TiO2
?etinkaya, S?d?ka,Augugliaro, Vincenzo,Garlisi, Corrado,Lewin, Erik,Palmisano, Giovanni,Sá, Jacinto,Yurdakal, Sedat
, p. 4549 - 4559 (2021)
TiO2catalysts, modified with acidic or alkaline solutions and then platinized, were used for the partial photocatalytic oxidation of 3-pyridinemethanol to 3-pyridinemethanal and vitamin B3under environmentally friendly conditions. The reaction took place in water under UVA light and air oxygen. Catalysts were characterized by TEM, photoluminescence, DRIFT-IR, Raman, DRS, XPS, and photocurrent measurements. The photocatalytic activity results show that Pt loading of untreated samples leads to a significant activity improvement (hence product yield) as much as acid and alkaline treatments do. Moreover, the alkaline treated TiO2samples exhibit a further increase in activity after loading with Pt. Pt acts as an electron scavenger promoting electron transfer from the TiO2conduction band, consequently boosting the photogenerated pair numbers available for the reactive process. Photocurrent measurements show that the TiO2photocatalysts' active sites increase significantly after platinization and alkaline/acid treatment. The treated and/or Pt loaded catalysts showed good thermal stability (at least up to 400 °C).
Degradation of quinoline by wet oxidation - Kinetic aspects and reaction mechanisms
Thomsen, Anne Belinda
, p. 136 - 146 (1998)
The high temperature, high pressure wet oxidation reaction of quinoline has been studied as a function of initial concentration, pH and temperature. At neutral to acidic pH, it is effective in the oxidation of quinoline at 240°C and above, whereas under alkaline conditions the reaction is markedly slowed down. The results indicate that the reaction is an auto-catalysed, free radical chain reaction transforming 99% of quinoline to other substances. Of the quinoline, 30-50% was oxidised to CO2 and H2O depending on the initial concentration. Wet oxidation of deuterium-labelled quinoline was used as a method for verifying and quantifying the reaction products. Fifteen reaction products were identified and quantitatively determined, accounting for 70% of the carbon present after treatment. Nicotinic acid was a main product, accounting for up to 35% of the parent substance. The formation of succinic acid is suggested to be a result of a coupling reaction of the acetic acid radical. A reaction mechanism is suggested for the degradation of quinoline; it involves hydroxyl radicals and the possible interaction with autoclave walls is discussed. The high temperature, high pressure wet oxidation reaction of quinoline has been studied as a function of initial concentration, pH and temperature. At neutral to acidic pH, it is effective in the oxidation of quinoline at 240°C and above, whereas under alkaline conditions the reaction is markedly slowed down. The results indicate that the reaction is an auto-catalysed, free radical chain reaction transforming 99% of quinoline to other substances. Of the quinoline, 30-50% was oxidised to CO2 and H2O depending on the initial concentration. Wet oxidation of deuterium-labelled quinoline was used as a method for verifying and quantifying the reaction products. Fifteen reaction products were identified and quantitatively determined, accounting for 70% of the carbon present after treatment. Nicotinic acid was a main product, accounting for up to 35% of the parent substance. The formation of succinic acid is suggested to be a result of a coupling reaction of the acetic acid radical. A reaction mechanism is suggested for the degradation of quinoline; it involves hydroxyl radicals and the possible interaction with autoclave walls is discussed.
Mild reductive deoximation with TiCl4/NaI reagent system
Balicki,Kaczmarek
, p. 1777 - 1782 (1991)
The application of the TiCl4/NaI reagent system in the reductive cleavage of oximes under mild conditions is reported.
3-picoline oxidation over monoclinic orthovanadate Cr0.5Al0.5VO4 catalysts
Zhaoxia, Song,Kadowaki, Eriko,Shishido, Tetsuya,Wang, Ye,Takehira, Katsuomi
, p. 754 - 755 (2001)
Monoclinic orthovanadate CrVO4-I was found to be active for the vapor phase oxidation of 3-picoline to nicotinic acid and was further activated by the solid solution formation with Al at the Cr site.
TiO2/graphene-like photocatalysts for selective oxidation of 3-pyridine-methanol to vitamin B3 under UV/solar simulated radiation in aqueous solution at room conditions: The effect of morphology on catalyst performances
Alfè, Michela,Spasiano, Danilo,Gargiulo, Valentina,Vitiello, Giuseppe,Capua, Roberto Di,Marotta, Raffaele
, p. 91 - 99 (2014)
Graphene-like layers, synthesized through a two-step oxidation/reduction wet treatment of a high surface carbon black, have been used to prepare composites with TiO2 nanoparticles by liquid phase deposition, followed by calcination at 200 °C. The photocatalytic activity of the TiO2/graphene-like composites has been tested for the selective conversion of 3-pyridine methanol to 3-pyridine carboxyaldehyde and nicotinic acid (vitamin B3), under de-aerated and UV/solar simulated conditions, in the presence of cupricions. Two different composite morphologies have been explored and a dependence of the photocatalytic activity has been assessed. An enhanced photocatalytic activity, with respect to the neat TiO2, has been observed and attributed to the broader variety of stable free-radical species generated, at a given photo-catalyst morphology, within the delocalized π-electron systems.
Micellar effects on kinetics and mechanism of Vilsmeier–Haack formylation and acetylation with Pyridines
Alyami, Bandar A.,Iqubal, S. M. Shakeel,Khan, Aejaz Abdullatif,Mohammed, Tasneem
, (2022/01/19)
An efficient preparation of Vilsmeier–Haack formylated and acetylated derivatives with pyridine and substituted pyridines has been developed by employing micelles as catalyst. Their kinetic study reveals a phenomenal rate enhancement in anionic SDS, cationic CTAB, and nonionic TX-100 micellar media. The Vilsmeier–Haack reaction follows second order kinetics. Piszkiewicz’s co-operativity model was used to interpret the results in micellar media. The observed activation parameters ΔH and ΔS values were calculated from Eyring’s plots. The main features of this study were easy process, mild reaction conditions and readily available reagents. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].
Novel pymetrozine intermediate nicotinaldehyde synthesis method and synthesis device
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Paragraph 0041-0046, (2021/03/31)
The invention discloses a novel pymetrozine intermediate nicotinaldehyde synthesis method. The method comprises the following steps: preparing a mixed solution; adding a main catalyst and a cocatalyst; and carrying out a reaction, cooling a reaction product, performing pressure reduced distillation and filtration to obtain a nicotinaldehyde solution. The invention further discloses synthesis equipment adopting the novel pymetrozine intermediate nicotinaldehyde synthesis method, the synthesis equipment comprises a reaction kettle, a stirring shaft and a reduced pressure distiller, the stirringshaft is arranged in the reaction kettle and is rotatably connected with the reaction kettle, the reduced pressure distiller is connected with the reaction kettle, and the reduced pressure distiller is connected with the reaction kettle and is located at the lower side of the reaction kettle. According to the present invention, the main catalyst and the co-catalyst are matched with each other, andthe experiment conditions are controlled, such that the process steps are simple and can be suitable for large-scale production, and the synthesis apparatus of the nicotinaldehyde synthesis method step is improved; the reaction kettle and the reduced pressure distiller are matched so as to improve the yield of the nicotinaldehyde; therefore, the product can be automatically produced, and the nicotinaldehyde can be produced on a large scale.
Photoredox-Catalyzed Simultaneous Olefin Hydrogenation and Alcohol Oxidation over Crystalline Porous Polymeric Carbon Nitride
Qiu, Chuntian,Sun, Yangyang,Xu, Yangsen,Zhang, Bing,Zhang, Xu,Yu, Lei,Su, Chenliang
, p. 3344 - 3350 (2021/07/26)
Booming of photocatalytic water splitting technology (PWST) opens a new avenue for the sustainable synthesis of high-value-added hydrogenated and oxidized fine chemicals, in which the design of efficient semiconductors for the in-situ and synergistic utilization of photogenerated redox centers are key roles. Herein, a porous polymeric carbon nitride (PPCN) with a crystalline backbone was constructed for visible light-induced photocatalytic hydrogen generation by photoexcited electrons, followed by in-situ utilization for olefin hydrogenation. Simultaneously, various alcohols were selectively transformed to valuable aldehydes or ketones by photoexcited holes. The porosity of PPCN provided it with a large surface area and a short transfer path for photogenerated carriers from the bulk to the surface, and the crystalline structure facilitated photogenerated charge transfer and separation, thus enhancing the overall photocatalytic performance. High reactivity and selectivity, good functionality tolerance, and broad reaction scope were achieved by this concerted photocatalysis system. The results contribute to the development of highly efficient semiconductor photocatalysts and synergistic redox reaction systems based on PWST for high-value-added fine chemical production.
A Magnetically Recyclable Palladium-Catalyzed Formylation of Aryl Iodides with Formic Acid as CO Source: A Practical Access to Aromatic Aldehydes
You, Shengyong,Zhang, Rongli,Cai, Mingzhong
, p. 1962 - 1970 (2021/01/25)
A magnetically recyclable palladium-catalyzed formylation of aryl iodides under CO gas-free conditions has been developed by using a bidentate phosphine ligand-modified magnetic nanoparticles-anchored- palladium(II) complex [2P-Fe 3O 4@SiO 2-Pd(OAc) 2] as catalyst, yielding a wide variety of aromatic aldehydes in moderate to excellent yields. Here, formic acid was employed as both the CO source and the hydrogen donor with iodine and PPh 3as the activators. This immobilized palladium catalyst can be obtained via a simple preparative procedure and can be facilely recovered simply by using an external magnetic field, and reused at least 9 times without any apparent loss of catalytic activity.