| Literature DB >> 35558325 |
Hamid Saeidian1, Saleh Vahdati Khajeh2, Zohreh Mirjafary3, Bagher Eftekhari-Sis2.
Abstract
Biomass conversion to carbonaceous materials and their use in various applications, such as capacitors, catalyst supports, and adsorbents, have attracted considerable attention from the viewpoint of green chemistry. In this regard, chicken egg white is one of the most important biomass, which can act as an in situ nitrogen doping source. In this paper, nitrogen-rich porous carbon material was synthesized from egg white biomass via pyrolysis at 600 °C under nitrogen atmosphere, followed by chemical activation with KOH at 500 °C. The results showed that the as-synthesized porous carbon material has a high content of nitrogen and high surface area, on which nitrogen can tune the surface hydrophobicity-hydrophilicity through interaction with water molecules. Then, the copper nanoparticles were immobilized on the surface of nitrogen-rich activated carbon by a chemical reduction method. Nanocatalyst structure was characterized by elemental analysis, TEM, AFM, Raman, FT-IR, porosimetry and atomic adsorption techniques. Finally, catalytic activity was evaluated for the one-pot synthesis of triazole in aqueous medium. The nanocatalyst offers some advantages such as excellent activity, low loading of catalyst, good yields of products and short reaction times. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35558325 PMCID: PMC9090647 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra08376b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Scheme 1Preparation of N-rich porous carbon immobilized Cu (NAC-Cu) and its catalytic activity in the synthesis of 1,2,3-triazole.
Fig. 1BET (a) and BJH (b) analysis of NAC-Cu.
Fig. 2XRD pattern of NAC-Cu nanocatalyst.
Fig. 3Raman spectrum of the as-synthesized N-rich porous carbon support.
Fig. 4TEM analysis of NAC-Cu.
Fig. 5AFM images of NAC-Cu; (a) 2-D, (b) 3-D and (c) voltage profile.
Fig. 6FT-IR spectrum of NAC-Cu.
NAC-Cu catalyzed the model reaction of phenylacetylene, sodium azide and benzyl bromide under various conditionsa
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| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Entry | Solvent | Catalyst | Time (h) | Yields |
| 1 | H2O | — | 8 | Trace |
| 2 | H2O | NAC (0.25 g) | 8 | Trace |
| 3 | H2O | NAC-Cu (2) | 1.5 | 92 |
| 4 | EtOH | NAC-Cu (2) | 1.5 | Trace |
| 5 | H2O/EtOH | NAC-Cu (2) | 1.5 | 95 |
| 6 | H2O | NAC-Cu (1) | 1.5 | 80 |
| 7 | H2O | NAC-Cu (0.5) | 5 | 60 |
| 8 | H2O | AC-Cu (2) | 24 | 50 |
Reaction conditions: solvent (5 mL), phenylacetylene 1 (1 mmol), benzyl bromide 2a (1 mmol), sodium azide (1.2 mmol) at room temperature.
Based on copper nanoparticles.
Isolated yield.
Copper supported on commercial activated carbon.
Efficient and green synthesis of 1,2,3-triazole derivatives catalyzed by NAC-Cu
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Entry | Alkyl halide 2 | Product 3 | Time (min) | Yield |
| 1 |
|
| 90 | 91 |
| 2 |
|
| 90 | 90 |
| 3 |
|
| 120 | 90 |
| 4 |
|
| 120 | 89 |
| 5 |
|
| 140 | 91 |
Isolated yield.
Fig. 7TEM analysis of recycled NAC-Cu.