4.6 Article

Conversion of glucose to levulinic acid and upgradation to γ-valerolactone on Ru/TiO2 catalysts

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY
Volume 45, Issue 32, Pages 14406-14413

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1nj01990b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFB1501602]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21875276]
  3. Shanxi Science and Technology Innovation Team of Biofuels & Chemicals, Institute of Coal Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Taiyuan, P. R. China

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This study explores the combination of glucose dehydration and hydrogenation in a single pot, successfully converting glucose to levulinic acid and gamma-valerolactone under nitrogen and hydrogen conditions. Among various catalysts, Ru/TiO2 (rutile) was found to be the most favorable hydrogenation catalyst.
Combining glucose dehydration and the subsequent hydrogenation in one pot is a preferable approach for process development as such a method allows in situ generation of the reactive intermediate to undergo further reaction without extra energy-intensive separation. Herein, phosphotungstic acid and various types of titania (anatase, rutile, P25) supported Ru-based catalysts were considered as the dehydration and hydrogenation catalysts, respectively. Modulating the different reactant media (N-2, H-2), various products were obtained with GBL-H2O as the solvent. A considerable yield (42%) of levulinic acid (LA) and gamma-valerolactone (GVL) (40%) were obtained in nitrogen and subsequent hydrogen. Ru/TiO2 (rutile) was the favorable hydrogenation catalyst among the three types of Ru/TiO2. Meanwhile, a certain amount of sorbitol (36%) was obtained in pure hydrogen. The hydrogenation of glucose is more likely to occur than the glucose dehydration. The physicochemical properties of the catalysts were characterized by XRD, BET, TPR, STEM and in situ CO/FT-IR, and the results show that well-dispersed Ru particles are located on the rutile crystallites, which facilitated the hydrogenation of LA. A strong metal support interaction (SMSI) was responsible for the various microstructure properties and the different hydrogenation reactivity. This work allows a better understanding of the reaction paths of glucose conversion.

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