4.8 Article

Kinetic Coupling of Redox and Acid Chemistry in Methanol Partial Oxidation on Vanadium Oxide Catalysts

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 12, Issue 19, Pages 11801-11820

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.2c01852

Keywords

vanadium oxide; methanol; oxidative dehydrogenation; redox catalysis; Mars-van Krevelen; acid catalysis; dimethoxymethane; metal oxide

Funding

  1. Suncor Energy Inc.
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Collaborative Research Development grant (NSERC CRD)

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Kinetic, isotopic, and spectroscopic studies have identified the active site requirements for three catalytic cycles involving methanol and oxygen reactions on titania-supported vanadium oxide catalysts. These cycles include oxidative dehydrogenation, Bronsted acid-catalyzed, and Tishchenko reactions. The structure of the active sites plays a crucial role in determining the rates and yields of the three products.
Kinetic, isotopic, and spectroscopic studies establish the active site requirements for three kinetically coupled catalytic cycles catalyzed by redox, Bronsted, and Lewis acid-base sites, which occur during methanol and oxygen reactions on titania-supported vanadium oxide catalysts. The initial activation of methanol during its oxidative dehydrogenation to formaldehyde restricts the overall turnovers-this reaction proceeds via CH3OH dissociative adsorption followed by a kinetically relevant C-H bond scission of the CH3O intermediate on V-O redox site pairs found at the interface of VOx and TiO2. The Gibbs free energy change of these two steps (Delta G(ads) and Delta G double dagger, respectively) both decrease as V-O-V coordination decreases and V-O-Ti coordination increases, leading to higher turnovers per surface vanadium as VOx dispersion increases, except the extreme case of isolated VO4. Coupled kinetically with the oxidative dehydrogenation cycle is the Bronsted acid-catalyzed cycle that forms dimethoxymethane-this cycle proceeds via methanol- and formaldehyde-derived CH3OCH2OH adsorption to Bronsted sites at the VOx-TiO2 interface, followed by its kinetically relevant C-O bond scission. Its turnovers also increase with VOx dispersion following the same trend as the oxidative dehydrogenation cycle but at a much faster rate, so the reaction can readily approach chemical equilibrium. Alongside the other two catalytic cycles is the Tishchenko reaction that forms methyl formate from two formaldehyde molecules, produced by the methanol oxidative dehydrogenation cycle, on exposed Ti4+-O2- Lewis acid-base pairs uncovered by VOx-this cycle proceeds via kinetically relevant intermolecular C-O bond formation followed by a rapid 1,3-hydride shift. The interplay of coexisting redox, Bronsted, and Lewis sites, each with its unique catalytic roles, leads to different rates and yields of the three products. The active site structure and mechanistic knowledge established here allow us to optimize the product ratios required for downstream synthesis of larger oxygenates.

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