Abstract
We report for the first time 100% benzyl alcohol yield from the liquid phase (T = 353 K, P = 9 bar) hydrogenation of benzaldehyde over Au/Al2O3. Under the same reaction conditions, a benchmark Pt/Al2O3 catalyst promoted the formation of toluene and benzene as hydrogenolysis by-products. Reaction kinetics was subjected to a Hammett treatment and the reaction constant (ρ = 0.9) was found to be consistent with a nucleophilic mechanism. A solvent (alcohol, water and alcohol + water) effect is demonstrated and ascribed to competitive adsorption where solvation by polar (water) facilitates benzaldehyde activation.
Graphic Abstract
Similar content being viewed by others
Explore related subjects
Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
1 Introduction
The production of benzyl alcohol by the selective reduction of benzaldehyde is an important commercial process with multiple applications as solvent for inks, paints and lacquers [1]. Oxide supported Ru [2], Pd [3, 4], Ni [5, 6] Cu [7] and Pt [8, 9] catalysts have been employed, typically in batch liquid phase at high pressure (20–40 bar) [1, 2, 5, 8, 10, 11]. The target of 100% benzyl alcohol yield (Scheme 1, path I) remains a challenge as undesired hydrogenolysis (to toluene and/or benzene, paths II–V [12]) is difficult to circumvent with reported alcohol yields in the 40–75% range [2,3,4,5,6, 9, 13]. Application of Au in hydrogenation, though less developed than use in oxidation, has been the focus of recent research [14,15,16,17,18,19]. In their review, Hari and Yaakob [20] established the potential of Au for selective liquid phase hydrogenation with enhanced alcohol selectivity in the conversion of aldehydes such as crotonaldehyde [21] and citral [22]. We provide here the first reported application of (Al2O3) supported Au in the liquid phase hydrogenation of benzaldehyde.
Gold delivers lower activity when compared with conventional transition metal catalysts due to a less effective activation/dissociation of H2 [23, 24]. Hydrogenation activity in liquid phase operation can be influenced by the solvent [25]. This has been related to differences in dielectric constant (ε) [26,27,28], bonding capacity (α) [28, 29] and H2 solubility [26]. Aramendía et al. [30] and Bertero et al. [27] found that the rate of acetophenone hydrogenation decreased with increasing ε of C1–C3 alcohols, which they ascribed to solvation effects that influenced reactant adsorption. On the other hand, Wan et al. [28] observed an increased hydrogenation rate with increasing α, linked to interaction between protic solvents and 2-butanone by hydrogen bonding that lowered the activation energy barrier. Drelinkiewicza et al. [26] concluded that acetophenone hydrogenation was more influenced by solvent polarity than H2 solubility. Organic solvents such as ethanol [3, 4, 9, 10, 13], dioxane [5] and alkanes (n-octane [3] and dodecane [31]) have been used in the liquid phase hydrogenation of benzaldehyde. Water as a benign green reaction medium has not been considered to any great extent. It is nonetheless worth flagging the work of Wang and co-workers [32] who demonstrated higher activity in the chemoselective hydrogenation of α, β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds over Au/CeO2 in water relative to organic solvents (ethanol, isopropanol, dioxane and cyclohexane).
In this work, we examine the role of solvent (n-pentanol, n-butanol, ethanol, H2O and ethanol + H2O mixtures) in determining benzaldehyde hydrogenation over Au/Al2O3. We have targeted 100% benzyl alcohol yield as an objective. The effect of para-positioned substituents (–OCH3, –CH3, –CH2CN and –CN) on rate has also been considered. Given the established application of supported Pt in benzaldehyde hydrogenation [8, 10, 11], we employed a commercial Pt/Al2O3 as a suitable benchmark catalyst.
2 Experimental
2.1 Materials
The Al2O3 support and (0.7% w/w) Pt/Al2O3 were purchased from Puralox (Condea Vista. Co.) and Alfa Aesar, respectively. The gold precursor (HAuCl4; 99.999%, Sigma-Aldrich) and urea (≥ 99%; Riedel-de Häen) were used as received. All the gases used (H2, N2, O2 and He) were of high purity (99.9%, BOC gases). The reactants (p-methoxybenzaldehyde, p-tolualdehyde, benzaldehyde, benzyl alcohol and p-cyanobenzaldehyde; ≥ 98%, Aldrich; p-formylphenyl acetonitrile, 96.5%, Apollo Scientific) and solvents (ethanol, butanol, pentanol; ≥ 99.5%, Aldrich) were used as supplied without further purification.
2.2 Catalyst Preparation and Activation
A 1% w/w Au/Al2O3 was prepared by deposition–precipitation using urea as basification agent. An aqueous mixture of urea (tenfold excess) and HAuCl4 in water (100 cm3, 25 × 10−3 g cm−3, pH = 2) was added to the support (ca. 10 g). The suspension was stirred and heated to 353 K (at 2 K min−1) and the pH progressively increased to ca. 7 after 3 h as a result of thermally induced urea decomposition.
The solid obtained was separated by centrifugation, washed with deionised water (with centrifugation between each washing) and dried in He (45 cm3 min−1) at 2 K min−1 to 373 K, which was maintained for 5 h. Au/Al2O3 and Pt/Al2O3 were crushed and sieved to 75 μm average particle diameter (ATM fine test sieves) and activated in 60 cm3 min−1 H2 at 2 K min−1 to 523 K (Au/Al2O3 [33]) and 773 K (Pt/Al2O3) [34]). Post activation, samples were cooled to 298 K and passivated in 1% v/v O2/He for ex situ analysis.
2.3 Catalyst Characterisation
The metal (Au and Pt) content was measured by inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES, Vista-PRO, Varian Inc.) from the (fivefold) diluted extract in HF (10 cm3, 0.1 M). Catalyst activation and chemisorption (at 353 K) measurements were conducted using the commercial CHEM-BET 3000 (Quantachrome) unit. The sample was loaded into a U-shaped quartz cell (3.76 mm i.d.), heated in 17 cm3 min−1 (Brooks mass flow controlled), 5% v/v H2/N2 at 2 K min−1 to 523–773 K and maintained until the signal returned to baseline. Samples were swept with 65 cm3 min−1 N2 for 1.5 h, cooled to 353 K and subjected to H2 chemisorption using a pulse (10–50 µl) titration procedure. Hydrogen pulse introduction was repeated until the signal area was constant, indicating surface saturation. Metal particle morphology (size and shape) was determined by scanning transmission (JEOL 2200FS field emission gun-equipped TEM unit) electron microscopy (STEM), employing Gatan DigitalMicrograph 1.82 for data acquisition/manipulation. Samples were dispersed in acetone and deposited on a holey carbon/Cu grid (300 Mesh). Up to 1000 individual particles were counted and the surface area mean metal (Au, Pt) diameter (dSTEM) calculated from
where ni is the number of particles of diameter di.
2.4 Catalytic System
The liquid phase hydrogenation reactions (T = 353 K; P = 9.0 bar) were carried out in a commercial batch stirred stainless steel reactor (100 cm3 autoclave, Parr reactor) equipped with a H2 supply system (GCE-Druva). The temperature was maintained at 353 ± 1 K using a process controller (Scientific & Medicine Products Ltd). At the beginning of each run, the aldehyde (or benzyl alcohol) solution (40 cm3 of pentanol, butanol, ethanol, H2O or ethanol + H2O; 0.05 M) and catalyst were charged and flushed three times with N2. The system was heated to the reaction temperature, pressurised and the stirring engaged (time t = 0 for reaction). In a series of blank tests, there was negligible conversion in the absence of catalyst or without H2. The initial molar reactant to metal ratio spanned the range 2 × 103–11 × 103. A liquid sampling system via syringe with in-line filters allowed a controlled withdrawal of aliquots (≤ 1.0 cm3) from the reactor. The concentration of reactant/product was determined from the total mass balance in the reaction mixture. Fractional conversion of benzaldehyde (XBenzaldehyde) is defined as
where subindex ‘0’ refers to initial concentration. Benzaldehyde consumption rate (R, mol mol−1metal h−1) was determined from a linear regression of the temporal benzaldehyde concentration profiles at XBenzaldehyde < 0.35 [35] according to:
where nmetal is the metal concentration (molmetal cm−3). Turnover frequency (TOF, s−1) was calculated using metal dispersion measurements from STEM as described elsewhere [36]. Selectivity to benzyl alcohol (SBenzyl alcohol) is given by
Product composition was determined by gas chromatography using a Perkin-Elmer AutoSystem XL chromatograph equipped with a programmed split/splitless injector and a flame ionisation detector, employing a DB-1 capillary column (i.d. = 0.33 mm, length = 50 m, film thickness = 0.20 μm). Data acquisition and manipulation were performed using the TotalChrom Workstation (Version 6.3.2 for Windows) chromatography data system. Repeated reaction runs with the same batch of catalyst delivered raw data reproducibility and carbon mass balances within ± 5%.
3 Results and Discussion
3.1 Catalyst Characterisation
The metal loading, particle size (from STEM analysis) and H2 chemisorption values are given in Table 1. Both supported catalysts exhibit similar loading where the metal phase takes the form of pseudo-spherical particles (Fig. 1I) over the 1–8 nm size range (Fig. 1II). This equivalence permits a direct comparison of catalytic response. Hydrogen uptake on supported Au is sensitive to metal size and dissociative adsorption is favoured on smaller (1–10 nm) particles [37]. The eightfold lower H2 uptake on Au/Al2O3 relative to Pt/Al2O3 (Table 1) can be linked to the high activation barrier for H2 adsorption on Au [38] and greater capacity of Pt to dissociate H2 [39, 40].
3.2 Liquid Phase Hydrogenation of Benzaldehyde
Reaction selectivity is challenging in benzaldehyde hydrogenation [1,2,3,4,5,6, 9, 13] with possible by-products, as shown in Scheme 1. Step I represents the target carbonyl group reduction. Subsequent hydrogenolysis results in the formation of benzene (step II) and toluene (step III) [41, 42]. Benzene and toluene can also be formed directly from benzaldehyde (steps IV and V) [41]. Further hydrogenation of benzyl alcohol to cyclohexylmethanol (step VI) has been reported for reaction over Ru/C [43] with toluene reduction to methylclohexane (step VII) over Ni/Al2O3 [6]. Under all reaction conditions used in this study, benzaldehyde was converted solely to the target benzyl alcohol over Au/Al2O3.
3.2.1 Reaction Under Kinetic Control
Benzaldehyde hydrogenation rate was determined from the linear variation of concentration with time, as shown in Fig. 2I. We carried out a series of tests in order to minimise diffusion and mass transfer limitations and ensure the reaction was operated under kinetic control. The effect of variations in agitation speed (Fig. 2IA) and catalyst mass (Fig. 2IB) on reaction rate was examined as two well-established diagnostic tests to assess external and internal transfer constraints [44]. An increase in stirring speed from 300 to 700 rpm was accompanied by a proportional increase in rate. Rate remained constant > 700 rpm, indicative of minimal gas–liquid/liquid–solid mass transfer contributions to overall rate [45]. Based on these results, the stirring speed was set at 900 rpm for subsequent tests. Rate was invariant over the range of catalyst masses considered in this work, confirming chemical control where external or internal transport constraints do not contribute to the catalytic response [45].
3.2.2 Reaction Mechanism and Solvent Effects
The effect of ring substituents was considered by testing the hydrogenation of substituted benzaldehydes bearing electron donating and withdrawing substituents (–OCH3, –CH3, –CH2CN, –CN) in the para position. In each case, Au/Al2O3 showed full selectivity to the corresponding alcohol with decreasing activity in the order: p-cyanobenzaldehyde > p-formylphenyl acetonitrile > benzaldehyde > p-tolualdehyde > p-methoxybenzaldehyde. The rate data were subjected to a Hammett correlation in order to probe reaction mechanism [46]. Rate for the substituted benzaldehyde (Ri) is related to benzaldehyde as reference (R) according to
The reaction constant (ρ) provides a measure of the susceptibility to substituent electronic effects while the σp factor is an empirical parameter (values taken from [46]) that reflects substituent electron donating/acceptor character [47, 48]. The fit of the experimental rate data is presented in Fig. 3. The low ρ (0.9) extracted from the linear correlation is close to that (0.7) reported for liquid phase hydrogenation of acetophenones over Pd/C [49] and suggests a partial charge in the transition state [7]. A positive reaction constant is consistent with nucleophilic addition [50]. Hydrogen can undergo heterolytic dissociation on the surface of Au/Al2O3 to generate H− that bonds to Au [16]. The hydride ion (H−) supplied by Au acts as a nucleophile that attacks the positively charged carbon in the –C=O group, activated on support Lewis acid sites (Al3+) at the interface with the metal [51]. An electron-donating substituent (in the para-position) lowers the reactivity of the carbonyl-carbon which, in turns, lowers the rate of reaction.
The solvent serves to dissolve the reactant and/or products but can also interact with the catalyst and influence performance [45]. Benzaldehyde hydrogenation rate was lower in ethanol (23 mol mol−1Au h−1) relative to water (78 mol mol−1Au h−1). The higher rate in aqueous solution can not be due to H2 solubility as under reaction conditions (T = 353 K, P = 9 bar) solubility is higher in ethanol (3.7 μmol cm−3) than water (0.8 μmol cm−3) [25]. The dielectric constant (ε) provides a measure of solvent capacity to interact with charged surface sites [52]; ε for water + ethanol mixtures was calculated following the approach described previously [25]. An increase in rate with solvent dielectric constant (ε) is shown in Fig. 4. Competition of solvent and benzaldehyde for adsorption sites [53] can impact on hydrogenation rate where increased surface affinity for the solvent inhibits benzaldehyde activation, resulting in lower reaction rate. Water [54] and alcohols [55] can adsorb on Lewis acid sites through the oxygen of the hydroxyl group and the greater electron density of the hydroxyl oxygen in alcohols must result in a stronger interaction that increases with increasing alcohol chain length [56].
The solvent can also influence reactant activation through hydrogen bonding with the –C=O function [28, 29]. This results in charge transfer from the lone pair of the oxygen atom in the carbonyl group to the O–H bond in protic solvents [57], the carbonyl-carbon becomes more electrophilic and the rate of reaction increases. Akpa et al. [58] employed DFT calculations to investigate 2-butanone hydrogenation in water over Ru/SiO2 and concluded that strong interaction between water and 2-butanone lowered the activation energy barrier and enhanced reaction rate. Catalyst (Ru/C) testing has also shown higher 2-butanone hydrogenation rate in solvents with higher ε [28]. In contrast, Bertero et al. [27] and Aramendía et al. [30] using Ni/SiO2 and Pd/AlPO4, respectively, reported a decrease in acetophenone hydrogenation rate with increasing ε due to solvation that inhibited the adsorption step.
3.2.3 Au/Al2O3 versus Pt/Al2O3
The reaction rate (and TOF) recorded for Pt/Al2O3 was significantly higher (Table 1), which can be attributed to the greater H2 chemisorption capacity. Reaction over Au/Al2O3 exhibited full selectivity to the target alcohol at all levels of benzaldehyde conversion (Fig. 5I) to deliver 100% benzyl alcohol yield. This response was probed further by considering benzyl alcohol hydrogenation over Au/Al2O3; no conversion was detected. The benchmark Pt/Al2O3 promoted hydrogenolysis to toluene and benzene with a lower yield (95%) to benzyl alcohol at full benzaldehyde conversion. The reaction was prolonged for a further 15 h after complete benzaldehyde conversion (Fig. 5II). Conversion of benzyl alcohol (to toluene and benzene) over Pt/Al2O3 resulted in a temporal decline in selectivity to the alcohol. This suggests sequential hydrogenation (step I, Scheme 1) and hydrogenolysis (steps II and III) steps. In contrast, full selectivity to benzyl alcohol was maintained with Au/Al2O3 over extended reaction times with no measurable hydrogenolysis. The results from this work illustrate the potential of supported Au for the selective transformation of substituted benzaldehydes with 100% yield of the target alcohol over prolonged reaction times.
4 Conclusions
The liquid phase (T = 353 K, P = 9.0 bar) hydrogenation of benzaldehyde over (1% w/w) Au (mean size = 3.6 nm) on Al2O3 was fully selective with 100% yield of the target benzyl alcohol. Exclusive –C=O reduction extended to a range of p-substituted (–OCH3, –CH3, –CH2CN, –CN) benzaldehydes. The reaction proceeds via a nucleophilic mechanism where electron withdrawing ring substituents elevated rate as demonstrated by the linear Hammett relationship. Selective hydrogenation rate increased with increasing solvent dielectric constant (ε), which is accounted for in terms of: (i) competition for surface adsorption sites that is more pronounced for alcohols with lower ε; (ii) reactant solvation by solvents with higher ε that activates –C=O for nucleophilic attack. Reaction over a Pt/Al2O3 benchmark (mean Pt size = 1.7 nm) was non-selective with the formation of by-products from hydrogenolysis. A higher consumption rate recorded for Pt/Al2O3 can be attributed to greater H2 chemisorption capacity. Our results demonstrate the potential of Au for ultra-selective aldehyde to alcohol hydrogenation using water as solvent.
References
Bhanushali JT, Kainthla I, Keri RS, Nagaraja BM (2016) ChemistrySelect 1:3839
Song L, Li K, Li X, Wu P (2011) React Kinet Mech Catal 104:99
Pinna F, Menegazzo F, Signoretto M, Canton P, Fagherazzi G, Pernicone N (2001) Appl Catal A 219:195
Divakar D, Manikandan D, Kalidoss G, Sivakumar T (2008) Catal Lett 125:277
Liu S, Fan X, Yan X, Du X, Chen L (2011) Appl Catal A 400:99
Saadi A, Merabti R, Rassoul Z, Bettahar MM (2006) J Mol Catal A 253:79
Saadi A, Rassoul Z, Bettahar MM (2000) J Mol Catal A 164:205
Li X, Zheng W, Pan H, Yu Y, Chen L, Wu P (2013) J Catal 300:9
Han M, Zhang H, Du Y, Yang P, Deng Z (2011) React Kinet Mech Catal 102:393
Ding Y, Li X, Li B, Wang H, Wu P (2012) Catal Commun 28:147
Li X, Shen Y, Song L, Wang H, Wu H, Liu Y, Wu P (2009) Chem Asian J 4:699
Perret N, Cárdenas-Lizana F, Keane MA (2011) Catal Commun 16:159
Arai M, Obata A, Nishiyama Y (1997) J Catal 166:115
Bond GC (2016) Gold Bull 49:53
Pan M, Brush AJ, Pozun ZD, Ham HC, Yu W-Y, Henkelman G, Hwang GS, Mullins CB (2013) Chem Soc Rev 42:5002
Mitsudome T, Kaneda K (2013) Green Chem 15:2636
Cárdenas-Lizana F, Keane MA (2014) Towards chemoselectivity: the case of supported Au for hydrogen mediated reactions. In: Prati L, Villa A (eds) Gold catalysis: preparation, characterization and applications in the gas and liquid phase. Pan Stanford Publ, Singapore, pp 415–465
Zhimin L, Hadi A, Chao L, Gao L (2017) Curr Org Chem 21:476
Zhao J, Jin R (2018) Nano Today 18:86
Hari TK, Yaakob Z (2015) Chin J Chem Eng 23:327
Lenz J, Campo BC, Alvarez M, Volpe MA (2009) J Catal 267:50
Milone C, Tropeano ML, Gulino G, Neri G, Ingoglia R, Galvagno S (2002) Chem Commun 8:868
Mohr C, Hofmeister H, Claus P (2003) J Catal 213:86
Zanella R, Louis C, Giorgio S, Touroude R (2004) J Catal 223:328
Gómez-Quero S, Cárdenas-Lizana F, Keane MA (2010) AIchE 56:756
Drelinkiewicza A, Waksmundzka A, Makowski W, Sobczak JW, Król A, Zieba A (2004) Catal Lett 94:143
Bertero NM, Trasarti AF, Apesteguía CR, Marchi AJ (2011) Appl Catal A 394:228
Wan H, Vitter A, Chaudhari RV, Subramaniam B (2014) J Catal 309:174
Ren B, Zhao M, Dong L, Li G (2014) Catal Commun 50:92
Aramendía MA, Borau V, Gómez JF, Herrera A, Jiménez C, Marinas JM (1993) J Catal 140:335
Okamoto M, Hirao T, Yamaai T (2010) J Catal 276:423
Wang M-M, He L, Liu Y-M, Cao Y, He H-Y, Fan K-N (2011) Green Chem 13:602
Mustafin K, Cárdenas-Lizana F, Keane MA (2017) J Chem Technol Biotechnol 92:2221
Kim SS, Lee HH, Hong SC (2012) Appl Catal A 423–424:100
Gómez-Quero S, Cárdenas-Lizana F, Keane MA (2008) Ind Eng Chem Res 47:6841
Li M, Wang X, Perret N, Keane MA (2014) Catal Commun 46:187
McEwan L, Julius M, Roberts S, Fletcher JCQ (2010) Gold Bull 43:298
Wang X, Perret N, Keane MA (2013) Appl Catal A 467:575
Hammer B, Nørskov JK (1995) Nature 376:238
Bus E, Miller JT, Bokhoven JAV (2005) J Phys Chem B 109:14581
Haffad D, Kameswari U, Bettahar MM, Chambellan A, Lavalley JC (1997) J Catal 172:85
Vannice MA, Poondi D (1997) J Catal 169:166
Kluson P, Cerveny L (1996) J Mol Catal A 108:107
Renken A, Kiwi-Minsker L (2012) Catalytic reaction: engineering principles. Willey, Weinhem
Singh UK, Vannice MA (2001) Appl Catal A 213:1
Jaffé HH (1953) Chem Rev 53:191
Shorter J (2000) Chem Lysty 94:210
Johnson CD (1973) The hammett equation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Bekkum Hv, Kieboom APG, Putte KJGvD (1969) Reccl Trav Chim Pay B 88:52
Qu H-E, Xiao C, Wang N, Yu K-H, Hu Q-S, Liu L-X (2011) Molecules 16:3855
Milone C, Trapani MC, Galvagno S (2008) Appl Catal A 337:163
Reichardt C (2004) Solvents and solvent effect in organic chemistry. Wiley, New York
Drexler MT, Amiridis MD (2003) J Catal 214:136
Menetrey M, Markovits A, Minot C (2003) Surf Sci 524:49
Cai S, Sohlberg K (2003) J Mol Catal A 193:157
Walz MM, Werner J, Ekholm V, Prisle NL, Ohrwall G, Bjorneholm O (2016) Phys Chem Chem Phys 18:6648
Kumar VR, Verma C, Umapathy S (2016) J Chem Phys 144(064302):1
Akpa BS, D’Agostino C, Gladden LF, Hindle K, Manyar H, McGregor J, Li R, Neurock M, Sinha N, Stitt EH, Weber D, Zeitler JA, Rooney DW (2012) J Catal 289:30
Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to Dr. Maoshuai Li for his contribution to the project. This work received support from the Overseas Research Students Award Scheme (ORSAS) to Dr. Y. Hao and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council EPRSC (Grant Number EP/L016419/1 to Chiara Pischetola through CRITICAT program). We also acknowledge EPSRC support for free access to the TEM/SEM facility at the University of St Andrews.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Conflict of interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Additional information
Publisher's Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
About this article
Cite this article
Hao, Y., Pischetola, C., Cárdenas-Lizana, F. et al. Selective Liquid Phase Hydrogenation of Benzaldehyde to Benzyl Alcohol Over Alumina Supported Gold. Catal Lett 150, 881–887 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10562-019-02944-y
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10562-019-02944-y