4.6 Article

Tandem Hydroperoxyl-Alkylperoxyl Radical Quenching by an Engineered Nanoporous Cerium Oxide Nanoparticle Macrostructure (NCeONP): Toward Efficient Solid-State Autoxidation Inhibitors

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 8, Issue 43, Pages 40174-40183

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.3c03654

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The use of nanomaterials as inhibitors of autoxidation has attracted significant attention. In this study, a new CeO2-derived nanoporous material with excellent autoxidation inhibiting properties is reported, and a plausible chemical mechanism for radical trapping is proposed.
The use of nanomaterials as inhibitors of the autoxidation of organic materials is attracting tremendous interest in petrochemistry, food storage, and biomedical applications. Metal oxide materials and CeO2 in particular represent one of the most investigated inorganic materials with promising radical trapping and antioxidant abilities. However, despite the importance, examples of the CeO2 material's ability to retard the autoxidation of organic substrates are still lacking, together with a plausible chemical mechanism for radical trapping. Herein, we report the synthesis of a new CeO2-derived nanoporous material (NCeONP) with excellent autoxidation inhibiting properties due to its ability to catalyze the cross-dismutation of alkyl peroxyl (ROO center dot) and hydroperoxyl (HOO center dot) radicals, generated in the system by the addition of the pro-aromatic hydrocarbon gamma-terpinene. The antioxidant ability of NCeONP is superior to that of other nanosized metal oxides, including TiO2, ZnO, ZrO2, and pristine CeO2 nanoparticles. Studies of the reaction with a sacrificial reductant allowed us to propose a mechanism of inhibition consisting of H atom transfer from HOO center dot to the metal oxides (MOx + HOO center dot -> MOx-H-center dot + O-2), followed by the release of the H atom to an ROO center dot radical (MOx-H-center dot + ROO center dot -> MOx + ROOH). Besides identifying NCeONP as a promising material for developing effective antioxidants, our study provides the first evidence of a radical mechanism that can be exploited to develop novel solid-state autoxidation inhibitors.

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