| Literature DB >> 26808458 |
Guangxu Chen1,2, Chaofa Xu1,2, Xiaoqing Huang1,2, Jinyu Ye1, Lin Gu3, Gang Li4, Zichao Tang4, Binghui Wu1,2, Huayan Yang1,2, Zipeng Zhao1,2, Zhiyou Zhou1, Gang Fu1,2, Nanfeng Zheng1,2.
Abstract
Tuning the electronic structure of heterogeneous metal catalysts has emerged as an effective strategy to optimize their catalytic activities. By preparing ethylenediamine-coated ultrathin platinum nanowires as a model catalyst, here we demonstrate an interfacial electronic effect induced by simple organic modifications to control the selectivity of metal nanocatalysts during catalytic hydrogenation. This we apply to produce thermodynamically unfavourable but industrially important compounds, with ultrathin platinum nanowires exhibiting an unexpectedly high selectivity for the production of N-hydroxylanilines, through the partial hydrogenation of nitroaromatics. Mechanistic studies reveal that the electron donation from ethylenediamine makes the surface of platinum nanowires highly electron rich. During catalysis, such an interfacial electronic effect makes the catalytic surface favour the adsorption of electron-deficient reactants over electron-rich substrates (that is, N-hydroxylanilines), thus preventing full hydrogenation. More importantly, this interfacial electronic effect, achieved through simple organic modifications, may now be used for the optimization of commercial platinum catalysts.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26808458 DOI: 10.1038/nmat4555
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841