Halogen‐Dependent Surface Confinement Governs Selective Alkane Functionalization to Olefins

Author

Zichittella, Guido

Scharfe, Matthias

Puértolas, Begoña

Paunović, Vladimir

Hemberger, Patrick

Bodi, Andras

Szentmiklósi, László

López, Núria

Pérez‐Ramírez, Javier

Publication date

2019-01-15



Abstract

The product distribution in direct alkane functionalization by oxyhalogenation strongly depends on the halogen of choice. We demonstrate that the superior selectivity to olefins over an iron phosphate catalyst in oxychlorination is the consequence of a surface‐confined reaction. By contrast, in oxybromination alkane activation follows a gas‐phase radical‐chain mechanism and yields a mixture of alkyl bromide, cracking, and combustion products. Surface‐coverage analysis of the catalyst and identification of gas‐phase radicals in operando mode are correlated to the catalytic performance by a multi‐technique approach, which combines kinetic studies with advanced characterization techniques such as prompt‐gamma activation analysis and photoelectron photoion coincidence spectroscopy. Rationalization of gas‐phase and surface contributions by density functional theory reveals that the molecular level effects of chlorine are pivotal in determining the stark selectivity differences. These results provide strategies for unraveling detailed mechanisms within complex reaction networks.

Document Type

Article
Accepted version

Language

English

Subject

54

Pages

5877 p.

Grant Agreement Number

ETH Research Grant ETH-04 16-1

SFOE (SI/ 501269-01)

Documents

Zichittella_et_al-2019-Angewandte_Chemie_International_Edition.pdf

3.605Mb

 

Rights

L'accés als continguts d'aquest document queda condicionat a l'acceptació de les condicions d'ús establertes per la següent llicència Creative Commons:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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