| Literature DB >> 35518227 |
Nitika Sharma1, Anu Choudhary1, Manpreet Kaur1, Chandan Sharma1, Satya Paul1, Monika Gupta1.
Abstract
Herein, well dispersed Ag-Cu NPs supported on modified graphene have been synthesized via a facile and rapid approach using sodium borohydride as a reducing agent under ambient conditions. Dicyandiamide is selected as an effective nitrogen source with TiO2 as an inorganic material to form two kinds of supports, labelled as TiO2-NGO and NTiO2-GO. Initially, the surface area analysis of these two support materials was carried out which indicated that N-doping of GO followed by anchoring with TiO2 has produced support material of larger surface area. Using both types of supports, ten nano-metal catalysts based on Ag and Cu were synthesized. Benefiting from the bimetallic synergistic effect and larger specific surface area of TiO2-NGO, Cu@Ag-TiO2-NGO is found to be a highly active and reusable catalyst out of other synthesized catalysts. It exhibits excellent catalytic activity for oxidation of alcohols and hydrocarbons as well as Chan-Lam coupling reactions. The nanocatalyst is intensively characterized by BET, SEM, HR-TEM, ICP-AES, EDX, CHN, FT-IR, TGA, XRD and XPS. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35518227 PMCID: PMC9056300 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra01540g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms of: (a) TiO2–NGO; (b) NTiO2–GO; (c) Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO; (d) Cu@Ag–NTiO2–GO.
Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO catalysed oxidation of alcohols and hydrocarbonsa,b
|
|
|---|
|
|
Reaction conditions: alcohol or hydrocarbon (1 mmol), TBHP (1 mmol), Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO (0.1 g), ethanol (5 mL) at 70 °C.
Column chromatography yield.
Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO catalyzed Chan–Lam cross-coupling reaction between arylamines and arylboronic acid in watera,b
|
|
|---|
|
|
Reaction conditions: aryl amine (1 mmol), arylboronic acid (1 mmol), Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO (0.1 g) in H2O (5 mL) at 80 °C.
Column chromatography yield.
Scheme 1Schematic representation of the synthesis of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO.
Fig. 2FEG-SEM images of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO.
Fig. 3HR-TEM images of: (a and b) Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO; (c) histogram of metal NPs; (d) SAED pattern of Cu@Ag-TiO2-NGO.
Fig. 4EDX spectrum of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO.
Fig. 5CHN analysis of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO.
Fig. 6FTIR spectra of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO, NTiO2–GO and TiO2–NGO.
Fig. 7TGA graph of GO, TiO2–NGO, NTiO2–GO and Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO.
Fig. 8XRD spectra of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO.
Fig. 9(A) XPS spectrum of C 1s; (B) XPS spectrum of N 1s; (C) XPS spectra depicting comparison of Ag 3d region, (a) monometallic Ag@TiO2–NGO; (b) bimetallic Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO; (c) reused Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO in case of oxidation; (d) reused Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO in case of C–N coupling. (D) XPS spectra depicting comparison of Cu 2p region, (a) bimetallic Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO; (b) reused Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO in case of oxidation; (c) reused Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO in case of C–N coupling.
Optimization of reaction conditions for the oxidation of fluorenea
|
| |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry | Catalyst | Time (h) | Yield |
| 1 | Ag–Cu@TiO2–NGO | 2 | 72 |
| 2 | Ag@Cu–TiO2–NGO | 2 | 80 |
|
|
|
|
|
| 4 | Cu@TiO2–NGO | 2 | 68 |
| 5 | Ag@TiO2–NGO | 2 | 74 |
| 6 | Ag–Cu@NTiO2–GO | 2 | 65 |
| 7 | Ag@Cu–NTiO2–GO | 2 | 73 |
| 8 | Cu@Ag–NTiO2–GO | 2 | 80 |
| 9 | Cu@NTiO2–GO | 2 | 60 |
| 10 | Ag@NTiO2–GO | 2 | 65 |
Reaction conditions: fluorene (1 mmol), TBHP (1 mmol), catalyst (0.1 g), ethanol (5 mL) at 70 °C.
Column chromatography yield.
Effect of various reaction parameters for the oxidation of alcohols and hydrocarbons in the presence of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGOa
| S. no | Solvent | Oxidant | Temperature (°C) | Time (h) | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | H2O | Air | 60 | 2 | No reaction |
| 2 | H2O | O2 | 60 | 2 | 40 |
| 3 | H2O | TBHP | 60 | 2 | 60 |
| 4 | EtOH : H2O (3 : 1) | O2 | 60 | 2 | 50 |
| 5 | EtOH : H2O (3 : 1) | TBHP | 60 | 2 | 70 |
| 6 | EtOH | O2 | 80 | 2 | 55 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 8 | EtOH | TBHP | 80 | 2 | 83 |
| 9 | EtOH | TBHP | 60 | 2 | 80 |
| 10 | EtOH | TBHP | 50 | 2 | 75 |
| 11 | CH3CN | TBHP | 60 | 2 | 38 |
| 12 | CH3CN | TBHP | 80 | 2 | 46 |
Reaction conditions: fluorene (1 mmol), TBHP (1 mmol), Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO (0.1 g, Cu = 2.69 mol%, Ag = 2.17 mol%), ethanol (5 mL) at 70 °C.
Column chromatography yield.
Comparison of the catalytic activity of the present catalyst with reported catalytic systems for the selective liquid-phase alcohol oxidation
| Catalyst | Reaction conditions | Time | Yield (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| STA-12(Co) | 4-Chlorobenzyl alcohol, TBHP, ethylacetate, 60 °C | 3h | 58 |
|
| Ag–ZnO nanocomposite | 4-Chlorobenzyl alcohol, TBHP, acetonitrile, 80 °C | 5 min | 90 |
|
| [Cu2(μ-O2CC6H5)4(4-Etpy)2] | 4-Chlorobenzyl alcohol, TBHP, methanol, 65 °C | 5 h | 78 |
|
| [Cu2(μ-O2CC6H5)4(4-DMAP)2] | 4-Chlorobenzyl alcohol, TBHP, methanol, 65 °C | 5 h | 75 |
|
| Cu/TiO2 | 4-Chlorobenzyl alcohol, TBHP, EtOH, 70 °C | 1.5 h | 57 | This work |
| Ag/TiO2 | 4-Chlorobenzyl alcohol, TBHP, EtOH, 70 °C | 1.5 h | 62 | This work |
| Au/TiO2 | Benzyl alcohol, TBHP, solvent free, 94 °C | 2 h | 50 |
|
| LaCrO3 | 4-Chlorobenzyl alcohol, TBHP, solvent-free, 90 °C | 2.5 h | 81 |
|
| Pd-G/SBA-16 G | Benzyl alcohol, air, toluene, 100 °C, K2CO3 | 7 h | 99 |
|
| Pt@CHs | Benzyl alcohol, O2, toluene, 80 °C, KOH | 3 h | 99 |
|
| Modified graphene based AgCu(0) bimetallic catalyst (Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO) | 4–Chlorobenzyl alcohol, TBHP, EtOH, 70 °C | 1.5 h | 85 | This work |
Effect of various reaction parameters for C–N coupling in the presence of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGOa
| S. no. | Solvent | Temperature (°C) | Time (h) | Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Water | RT | 8 | 25 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 3 | Water | 100 | 3.75 | 76 |
| 4 | Acetonitrile | RT | 6.5 | 35 |
| 5 | Toluene | RT | 6 | 35 |
| 6 | Ethanol | 70 | 5.5 | 55 |
| 7 | Methanol | RT | 6 | 35 |
| 8 | H2O/EtOH (1 : 1) | RT | 5 | 35 |
| 9 | H2O/EtOH (1 : 1) | 60 | 5 | 53 |
| 10 | H2O/EtOH (1 : 1) | 70 | 5 | 64 |
Reaction conditions: aniline (1 mmol), phenylboronic acid (1 mmol), Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO (0.1 g) in H2O (5 mL).
Column chromatography yield.
Fig. 10Plausible mechanism for Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO catalyzed C–N coupling reaction: (I) oxidative addition; (II) transmetallation; (III) reductive elimination.
Fig. 11Probable mechanistic path for Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO catalyzed oxidation of alcohols and hydrocarbons.
Fig. 12Recyclability of Cu@Ag–TiO2–NGO for oxidation (2a, Table 3) and Chan–Lam coupling reaction (5c, Table 6) under optimized reaction conditions.