4.8 Article

Co/Ni/Mg/Al layered double hydroxides as precursors of catalysts for the hydrogenation of nitriles: Hydrogenation of acetonitrile

Journal

JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS
Volume 189, Issue 1, Pages 117-128

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1006/jcat.1999.2694

Keywords

layered double hydroxides; hydrotalcite; Ni, Co bimetallic catalysts; hydrogenation; acetonitrile; nitrile; IR spectroscopy

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Layered double hydroxides (LDHs) with a hydrotalcite-like structure and containing Ni(2+)/Co(2+)/Mg(2+)/Al(3+) cations in different amounts were prepared and activated in various conditions. Depending on the chemical composition and the calcination temperature, mixed-oxide and spinel-like phases of complex compositions are obtained. They lead to well-dispersed bimetallic phases of high metal loadings upon reduction. Temperature-programmed reduction by Hz showed that the introduction of Mg decreases the reducibility of metals and that most of the Ni and Co are together in bimetallic aggregates. These catalysts were tested in the gasphase hydrogenation of acetonitrile between 350 and 450 K and with a H(2)/CH(3)CN molar ratio of ca. 33. The main product is ethylamine (MEA); secondary products are N-ethyl,ethylimine at low conversion, diethylamine and triethylamine at high conversion. The Ni-free catalyst is three orders of magnitude less active than the Ni-containing samples. The by-products are formed by condensation between imine- and amine-like adsorbed species on metal and acid sites (bifunctional mechanism) and on the metal sites alone as well. The tuned addition of Mg (Mg/(Mg + Ni + Co) approximate to 0.25) lowers the surface acidity and the bifunctionalized formation of by-products consequently. A net increase in MEA selectivity is further reached thanks to the formation of bimetallic NiCo phases. It is proposed that by-product formation on the metal surface occurs by condensation at Ni(0) sites between multibonded adsorbed species, which could be of the acimidoyl and aminomethylcarbene types. The first role of Co is the dilution of the Ni surface in small ensembles less prone to accomodate neighboring multibonded species. The IR spectroscopy of adsorbed CO provided evidences of the dilution of Ni by Co in bimetallic NiCo particles, A catalyst obtained from the CoMi/Mg/Al (0.27/0.26/0.22/0.25) LDH, calcined at 393 K and then reduced at 893 K, exhibits the highest selectivity to ethylamine, 98.2% at 10% CH(3)CN conversion. (C) 2000 Academic Press.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available