| Literature DB >> 36132629 |
Gauravjyoti D Kalita1, Podma P Sarmah1, Golap Kalita2, Pankaj Das1.
Abstract
A facile ligand-assisted approach of synthesizing bimetallic Au-Pd nanoparticles supported on silica with a tunable core@shell structure is presented. Maneuvering the addition sequence of metal salts, both Aucore-Pdshell (Au@Pd-SiO2) and Pdcore-Aushell (Pd@Au-SiO2) nanoparticles were synthesized. The structures and compositions of the core-shell materials were confirmed by probe-corrected HRTEM, TEM-EDX mapping, EDS line scanning, XPS, PXRD, BET, FE-SEM-EDX and ICP analysis. The synergistic potentials of the core-shell materials were evaluated for two important reactions viz. hydrogenation of nitroarenes to anilines and hydration of nitriles to amides. In fact, in both the reactions, the Au-Pd materials exhibited superior performance over monometallic Au or Pd counterparts. Notably, among the two bimetallic materials, the one with Pdcore-Aushell structure displayed superior activity over the Aucore-Pdshell structure which could be attributed to the higher stability and uniform Au-Pd bimetallic interfaces in the former compared to the latter. Apart from enhanced synergism, high chemoselectivity in hydrogenation, wide functional group tolerance, high recyclability, etc. are other advantages of our system. A kinetic study has also been performed for the nitrile hydration reaction which demonstrates first order kinetics. Evaluation of rate constants along with a brief investigation on the Hammett parameters has also been presented. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 36132629 PMCID: PMC9417894 DOI: 10.1039/d1na00489a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Adv ISSN: 2516-0230
Scheme 1Synthesis of Au–Pd core–shell nanoparticles supported on phosphine-functionalized silica gel.
Fig. 1(a) TEM images and corresponding size distribution (inset, based on particle count 100) of Au@Pd–SiO2 and (b) Pd@Au–SiO2; (c) HRTEM image of Au@Pd–SiO2 and (d) Pd@Au–SiO2; high-magnification HRTEM image of a single particle depicting cross-sectional lattice planes and d-spacings of (e) Au@Pd–SiO2 and (f) Pd@Au–SiO2; fast Fourier transform (FFT) of Au, Pd and/or Au–Pd mixed reflections for (g) Au@Pd–SiO2 and (h) Pd@Au–SiO2.
Fig. 2Crystalline lattice planes (a)–(c) and corresponding FFT maps (d)–(f) of Pd@Au–SiO2, (g) powder-XRD patterns of the nanoparticle incorporated silica-based materials: Pd@Au–SiO2, Au@Pd–SiO2, SiO2@Pd and SiO2@Au.
Fig. 3TEM-EDX mapping of Au@Pd–SiO2; (a) Pd map (white dots), (b) Au map (green dots) and Pd map (white dots) with high intensity of Au atoms at the core (inset magnified) and (c) RGB-overlay; TEM-EDX mapping of Pd@Au–SiO2; (d) Pd map (white dots), (e) Au map (green dots) and Pd map (white dots) with high intensity of Pd atoms at the core (inset magnified) and (f) RGB-overlay.
Fig. 4TEM micrograph and EDS line scanning profile of a single particle (highlighted on inset) of (a) Au@Pd–SiO2 and (b) Pd@Au–SiO2.
Fig. 5(a) N2-sorption isotherms of the nanoparticle incorporated silica-based materials: SiO2@Au, SiO2@Pd, Au@Pd–SiO2 and Pd@Au–SiO2, (b) XPS spectra of (i) SiO2@Au, (ii) Pd@Au–SiO2 and (iii) Au@Pd–SiO2 showing the Au 4f5/2 and 4f7/2 states and (c) XPS spectra of (i) SiO2@Pd, (ii) Au@Pd–SiO2 and (iii) Pd@Au–SiO2 3d5/2 and 3d3/2 showing Pd 3d5/2 and 3d3/2 states.
A comparative study of the surface area, pore volume and metal content of the core–shell nanoparticles with their neat support
| Sample |
| Pore volume | Metal content |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-Diphenylphosphinoethyl functionalized silica gel | 500.9 | 0.476 | — |
| SiO2@Au | 411.3 | 0.882 | 0.96 |
| SiO2@Pd | 423.3 | 0.663 | 0.84 |
| Au@Pd–SiO2 | 380.0 | 0.633 | 0.78(Pd), 0.91(Au) |
| Pd@Au–SiO2 | 408.6 | 0.445 | 0.82(Pd), 0.89(Au) |
BET surface area was measured from the N2-sorption isotherm at 77 K.
Total pore volume was measured at P/P0 = 0.98.
Metal content of the materials as measured from ICP-AES analysis.
Scheme 2Hydrogenation of 4-chloronitrobenzene (4-CNB) to 4-chloroaniline (4-CAN) with different catalysts under liquid phase conditions.
Fig. 6Comparison of conversions and selectivity obtained for different types of catalysts: SiO2@Au (Au: 0.28 mol%); SiO2@Pd (Pd: 0.28 mol%); Au@Pd–SiO2 (Au: 0.16 mol%, Pd: 0.12 mol%); Pd@Au–SiO2 (Au: 0.13 mol%, Pd: 0.15 mol%) (metal concentrations in the catalysts were determined in terms of ICP-AES analysis).
Fig. 7(a) Temperature optimization for the Pd@Au–SiO2 catalyst [Au (0.13 mol%), Pd (0.15 mol%)] with 4-CNB as the model substrate (2 mmol) and ethanol (5 ml) as the solvent for 1 h and (b) solvent optimization studies under the above conditions at 80 °C.
Substrate scope of Au–Pd catalyzed hydrogenation reactionsa,b,c
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Reaction conditions: substrate (2 mmol), ethanol (5 ml), Pd@Au–SiO2 [Au (0.13 mol%), Pd (0.15 mol%)], hydrazine–hydrate (2 equivalents) at 80 °C for 1 h.
Determined by GC-MS analysis and aniline (AN) was formed as the sole by-product.
MS-spectra available in the ESI.
A comparative catalytic study of the hydration of nitroarenes using various bimetallic catalystsa
| Catalyst | Conditions | Efficiency | Selectivity | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pd/AlPO4/SiO2 | Et3N, 90–95 °C, neat, 2–5 h | Low yields for arenes bearing EDG | Good selectivity on: ketone, ester |
|
| Poor selectivity on: halide | ||||
| Pd–Au/TiO2 | No base, N2H4·H2O, R.T., neat, 10–60 min | Low yields for arenes bearing 3-iodo, amino and biaryl groups | — |
|
| Pd@Au–SiO2 | No base, N2H4·H2O, 80 °C, ethanol, 1 h | Good yields for arenes bearing EWG and EDG (56–98%) | Good selectivity on halide, nitrile, aldehyde, ketone, acid | This work |
| Pd/ZrP | No base, 40–60 °C, ethanol, 2–24 h | Good yields for EDG (99–99%) | Good selectivity on: ester, nitrile, chlorine and double bond |
|
| PdNi/mCN | No base, R.T., ethanol : H2O (3 : 7), 40–60 min | Good yields (84–100%) | Good selectivity on: halide (Cl, Br, I) |
|
| PdCu@MWCNT | No base, NaBH4, R.T., methanol : H2O (3 : 7), 10–60 min | Good yields for arenes bearing EDG (12–99%) | Good selectivity on: heteroaryl, nitrile, chlorine, bromine and alkyl group |
|
| Co@Pd/NC | No base, H2 (1 bar), R.T., EtOAc, 1–22 h, (1.5% Au, 0.01% Pt) | Good yields for arenes bearing EDG (93–99%) | Good selectivity on: ester, nitrile, chlorine and double bond |
|
| Long intervals on: bromine | ||||
| Au@Pt/TiO2 | No base, H2 (8 bar), 90–95 °C, toluene, 1–22 h, (1.5% Au, 0.01% Pt) | Good yields for 3-nitrostyrene (94%) | Not tested for other substrates |
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| G-NiPd | No base, NH3BH3, R.T., methanol : H2O (3 : 7), 5–15 min | Good yields for arenes bearing EDG (>99%) | Good selectivity on: heteroaryl, fluorene, bromine and aliphatic groups |
|
| Long intervals on: 3-amino group | ||||
| Au–Sn/SiO2 | No base, H2 (13 bar), 80–100 °C, toluene, 1.5 h, (0.55% Au, 1% Sn) | Good yields for arenes bearing nitrobenzene (29.1–99%) and 3-nitrostyrene (24.2–99%) | Good selectivity on: amide, amino, aldehyde, nitrile and chlorine bond |
|
| Au–Pd/Mo2C | No base, H2 (1 bar), 220 °C, gas-phase, 1 h, (0.84% Au, 11.7% Pd) | Good yields for nitro, chloro and nitrile (100%) | Good selectivity on: halide and nitrile |
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EDG = electron donating group, EWG = electron withdrawing group, Ref. = references.
Fig. 8Recyclability tests for the catalysts performed up to the 5th run corresponding to both (a) conversion and (b) selectivity. (c) Hot filtration test for 4-CNB hydrogenation using Pd@Au–SiO2. (d) Powder-XRD of the material. (e) TEM image of Pd@Au–SiO2 after the 5th run with the corresponding size histogram (inset) and (f) TEM-EDX spectra of the catalyst recovered after recyclability tests performed up to the 5th run.
Scheme 3Hydration of benzonitrile to benzamide with different catalysts under liquid phase conditions.
Fig. 9Comparison of conversion and selectivity obtained for different catalysts: SiO2@Au (Au: 0.2 mol%); SiO2@Pd (Pd: 0.2 mol%); Au@Pd–SiO2 (Au: 0.12 mol%, Pd: 0.08 mol%); Pd@Au–SiO2 (Au: 0.09 mol%, Pd: 0.11 mol%) (metal concentrations in the catalysts were determined by ICP-AES analysis).
Substrate scope of Au–Pd catalyzed nitrile hydration using alkyl and aryl cyanidesa,b,c
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Reaction conditions: substrate (0.5 mmol), H2O (0.089 mmol), Pd@Au–SiO2 [Au (0.09 mol%), Pd (0.11 mol%)], PrOH–H2O (1 : 1, 4 ml) at 60 °C for 1 h.
Determined by GC-MS analysis.
MS-spectra available in the ESI.
Fig. 10(a) C0/Cvs. time and (b) ln(C0/C) vs. time plots for the hydration of nitriles with Pd@Au–SiO2 under similar experimental conditions, where C0 and C are the concentrations of benzonitrile at time 0 and t respectively (c) Hammett plot for the hydration of benzonitrile and p-substituted benzonitriles, conditions: nitrile (0.5 mmol), Pd@Au–SiO2 (12.5 mg), H2O/i-PrOH (1 : 1).
Fig. 11Reusability tests for the catalysts performed up to the 5th run corresponding to both (a) conversion and (b) selectivity. (c) HRTEM image and size histogram (inset, 100 particles per site count) of Pd@Au–SiO2 after the 5th run with the corresponding (d) FESEM micrograph of the material.
A comparative catalytic study of the hydration of benzonitrile to benzamide under liquid phase conditions
| Catalyst | Conditions | Metal content (mol%) | Conversion (%) | Selectivity (%) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Au@Pd–SiO2 | 50 °C, 1 h | Au (0.09), Pd (0.11) | 90 | 99 | This work |
| Pd@Au–SiO2 | 50 °C, 1 h | Au (0.12), Pd (0.08) | 72 | 99 | This work |
| Pd(NO3)2 | 50 °C, 10 min | 2–10 | 94 | — |
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| Pd(OAc)2 | 70 °C, 24 h | 5 | 88 | — |
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| Pd(OAc)2/Sc(OTf)3 | 30 °C, 12 h | Sc (3), Pd (1.5) | 80 | — |
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| Pd3P0.95 QDs | 90 °C, 4 h | 1 | 86 | — |
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| Pd-PVP | 180 °C, 12 h, CuSO4 | 5 | 99 | 99 |
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| Au–TiO2-VS | 60 °C, 5 h | 2 | >99 | 99 |
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| Pd/C-500ox | 95–140 °C, 24 h | 2 | 99 | 96 |
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Reaction conditions: benzonitrile (0.5 mmol), H2O (0.089 mmol), PrOH–H2O (1 : 1, 4 ml).
Determined by GC-MS analysis.