4.6 Article

Direct hydroxylation of benzene to phenol with molecular oxygen over vanadium oxide nanospheres and study of its mechanism

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 5, Issue 114, Pages 94164-94170

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c5ra17287j

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Funding

  1. National Nature Science Foundation of China [21103078, 21003069]

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Direct hydroxylation of benzene to phenol using molecular oxygen is a green route with high atom economy but still a great challenge when compared with the existing method of production. The activation of oxygen is necessary and reductive agents were used to activate dioxygen in a so-called reductive activation process. Here, nano vanadium oxides that consist mainly of low valence vanadium to activate dioxygen were prepared under different conditions via a hydrothermal method. Under the optimized conditions, an excellent phenol selectivity of 96.3% with benzene conversion of 4.2% was achieved over the VOC2O4-N-5 without reductive agents. Characterizations revealed that VOC2O4-N-5 was composed of a mesoporous nanosphere structure with medium strong acid sites and low valence vanadium species. A mechanism was proposed as follows: dioxygen was activated by low valence vanadium in VOC2O4-N-5 to produce the active oxygen species which oxidized acetic acid to peracetic acid. Then the active oxygen species was subsequently transferred from peracetic acid to benzene and inserted into the C-H bond to give phenol.

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