| Literature DB >> 32110318 |
Yifan Sun1,2, Albert J Darling1, Yawei Li3, Kazunori Fujisawa4,2, Cameron F Holder1, He Liu1, Michael J Janik3, Mauricio Terrones1,4,5,2, Raymond E Schaak1,3.
Abstract
Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are well known catalysts as both bulk and nanoscale materials. Two-dimensional (2-D) TMDs, which contain single- and few-layer nanosheets, are increasingly studied as catalytic materials because of their unique thickness-dependent properties and high surface areas. Here, colloidal 2H-WS2 nanostructures are used as a model 2-D TMD system to understand how high catalytic activity and selectivity can be achieved for useful organic transformations. Free-standing, colloidal 2H-WS2 nanostructures containing few-layer nanosheets are shown to catalyze the selective hydrogenation of a broad scope of substituted nitroarenes to their corresponding aniline derivatives in the presence of other reducible functional groups. Microscopic and computational studies reveal the important roles of sulfur vacancy-rich basal planes and tungsten-terminated edges, which are more abundant in nanostructured 2-D materials than in their bulk counterparts, in enabling the functional group selectivity. At tungsten-terminated edges and on regions of the basal planes having high concentrations of sulfur vacancies, vertical adsorption of the nitroarene is favored, thus facilitating hydrogen transfer exclusively to the nitro group due to geometric effects. At lower sulfur vacancy concentrations on the basal planes, parallel adsorption of the nitroarene is favored, and the nitro group is selectively hydrogenated due to a lower kinetic barrier. These mechanistic insights reveal how the various defect structures and configurations on 2-D TMD nanostructures facilitate functional group selectivity through distinct mechanisms that depend upon the adsorption geometry, which may have important implications for the design of new and enhanced 2-D catalytic materials across a potentially broad scope of reactions. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 32110318 PMCID: PMC6979393 DOI: 10.1039/c9sc03337h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1(a) TEM and (b) HAADF-STEM images of 2H-WS2 nanoflowers. (c) Top (basal plane) and (d) side (edge) views of the hexagonal structure for 2H-WS2. (e) Raman spectrum and (f) powder XRD data for the as-prepared 2H-WS2 nanostructures.
Fig. 2(a) Aliquot study for the selective hydrogenation of 3-nitrostyrene catalyzed by 2H-WS2 nanostructures at 50 bar H2 and 120 °C, showing the percentage of 3-nitrostyrene (grey), 3-vinylaniline (green), and 3-ethylaniline (pink) at different reaction times. (b) Percent conversion (grey) and selectivity (green) for the hydrogenation of 3-nitrostyrene to 3-vinylaniline using the same nanostructured 2H-WS2 catalyst over five successive cycles.
Conversion and selectivity of nanostructured 2H-WS2 catalyzed hydrogenation of substituted nitroarenes to corresponding anilines
|
| |||
| Entry | Substrate | Conv. (%) | Selec. (%) |
| 1 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 2 |
| >99 | 94 |
| 3 |
| >99 | 78 |
| 4 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 5 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 6 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 7 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 8 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 9 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 10 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 11 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 12 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 13 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 14 |
| >99 | >99 |
| 15 |
| >99 | >99 |
Unless otherwise noted, hydrogenations were performed under the following conditions: WS2 (5 mg), THF (1 mL), H2O (125 μL), substrate (0.125 mmol), 8 h, 120 °C.
Run at 100 °C.
Fig. 3(a) High-resolution ADF-STEM image showing bilayer and monolayer domains with atomic vacancies on the surface (basal plane) of the 2H-WS2 nanostructures. (b) Atomically resolved ADF-STEM image for a region of monolayer 1H-WS2. (c) Experimental ADF intensity curves and (d) structural models corresponding to the three line scans indicated by the green, orange, and red arrows in (b), showing the alternation of tungsten (W) and sulfur (S2) configurations, as well as existence of tungsten (VW) and monosulfur (VS) vacancies.
Fig. 4Simulated structures for different types of S-vacancies on the basal planes of 1H-WS2: (a) 1VS, (b) 4VS, and (c) 1VS2. The vacancy sites are highlighted by red circles.
Fig. 5(a) Calculated adsorption energies of the three adsorption geometries (vertical 1, vertical 2, and parallel) on the three sulfur vacancy models (1VS, 1VS2, and 4VS) for 1H-WS2 basal planes. Lowest energy adsorbed structures of 3-nitrostyrene absorbed on the surface of a 1H-WS2 monolayer are shown for the (b) 1VS (parallel); (c) 1VS2 (parallel); and (d) 4VS (vertical) orientations on the different vacancy models.
Fig. 6Optimized geometries of 3-nitrostyrene absorbed on the tungsten-terminated edges of 1H-WS2 monolayer are shown for the (a) W-2 and (b) W-3 models from three viewing angles.