| Literature DB >> 33973696 |
Xi Liu1, Bin Yin2, Wenxiang Zhang1, Xiao Yu1, Yiyao Du1, Siming Zhao1, Guangyu Zhang1, Mengyuan Liu1, Hao Yan1, Manuela Abbotsi-Dogbey1, Saleem T Al-Absi1, Sayan Yeredil1, Chaohe Yang1, Jian Shen3, Wenjuan Yan1, Xin Jin1.
Abstract
Catalytic transfer hydrogenolysis, using liquid H-donors in the absence of pressurized H2 under mild temperatures, is regarded as the most important technology to substitute traditional hydrogenation processes in industry. Despite decade development with several breakthroughs in catalyst design, the reaction mechanism involved in H2 generation and subsequent hydrogenolysis reactions is still under debate. In this review, transfer hydrogenolysis of glycerol, as a representative example, on metallic catalysts is revised critically with respect to surface reaction mechanism and catalyst design. The detailed reaction pathways for propanol, methanol, formic acid and ethanol for H2 generation have been discussed systematically. In particular, reaction mechanism for catalytic C-H cleavage, H spillover/transfer and C-O cleavage reaction steps will be critically revised with experimental and theoretical results in literature. Insights into reaction pathways, mechanism and H2 transfer efficiency and structure-performance relation for Pd, Cu and Ni catalysts will be provided for future development of catalyst manufacture and process development. The outcome of this work is useful for successful implementation of bio-refinery.Entities:
Keywords: catalyst; glycerol; mechanism; transfer hydrogenolysis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33973696 DOI: 10.1002/tcr.202100037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Rec ISSN: 1528-0691 Impact factor: 6.771