Journal
ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 12, Issue 18, Pages 11159-11168Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.2c0282311159
Keywords
methane oxidation; metal-organic frameworks; cobalt; heterogeneous catalysis; methanol
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Funding
- CSIR-HRDG [01 (3040) /21/EMR-II]
- IRD, IIT Delhi [MI02468]
- CSIR
- UGC
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In this study, a novel Ce-UiO-Co heterogeneous catalyst is reported, which can efficiently convert methane to methanol under mild conditions with high selectivity and yield. The catalyst design is based on a metal-organic framework and involves the formation of an intermediate species in the pores of Ce-UiO-66, enabling the activation and functionalization of methane.
Developing highly efficient catalysts for chemoselective oxidation of methane to methanol under mild conditions is a grand challenge. We report the successful design and synthesis of a heterogeneous single-site cobalt hydroxide catalyst [Ce-UiO-Co(OH)] supported by the nodes of a cerium metal-organic framework (Ce-UiO-66 MOF), which is efficient in partial methane oxidation using hydrogen peroxide at 80 degrees C, giving an extraordinarily high methanol yield of 2166 mmol g(cat) (-1) in 99% selectivity with a turnover number of 3250. The Ce-UiO-Co catalyst is significantly more active and selective than its iso-structural zirconium analogue Zr-UiO-Co in methane to methanol conversion. Experimental and computational studies suggest the formation of the CoIII(eta(2)-hydroperoxide) intermediate coordinating with one mu(4)-O- and two neutral carboxylate oxygens of Ce4+ oxo nodes within the pores of Ce-UiO-66, which undergoes a-bond metathesis with the methane C-H bond in the turnover limiting step of the catalytic cycle. The significantly lower activation energy of Ce-UiO-Co than Zr-UiO-Co is due to the highly electron-deficient nature of the cobalt ion of the Co(eta(2)-O2H) species supported by the Ce-UiO nodes, which promotes facile C-H activation of methane via a-bond metathesis. This MOF-based catalyst design holds promise in developing molecular electrophilic abundant metal catalysts for chemoselective functionalization of saturated hydrocarbons.
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