4.8 Article

Acetic acid ketonization on tetragonal zirconia: Role of surface reduction

Journal

JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS
Volume 344, Issue -, Pages 465-473

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcat.2016.10.002

Keywords

Ketonization; Oxide surfaces; Zirconia; Oxygen vacancy; Density functional theory

Funding

  1. European Community [604307]
  2. CINECA computing center through the LISA program [LI05p_TABZCOS]

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The ketonization reaction of acetic acid on the (101) surface of tetragonal zirconia, a process relevant in the catalytic upgrade of cellulosic biomass has been studied by means of DFT+U calculations. The aim was to better understand the role of catalyst pre-reduction. Acetic acid adsorbs strongly on the zirconia surface, and deprotonation to acetate takes place easily. Then, a proton transfer from the methyl group of the acetate ion, CH3COO-, to the surface occurs to form an eno-species, CH2COO2- (intermediate 1). In a parallel step, acetate ions convert into acyl fragments, CH3CO, by oxygen extraction (intermediate 2). Once formed, the acyl intermediate 2 is able to attack the eno-species intermediate 1, to form a B-keto-acid. On stoichiometric zirconia, the formation of the intermediate I, CH2COO2-, is unfavorable; oxygen vacancies on the reduced surface stabilize the reaction product and strongly reduce the activation energy. Reduced Zr3+ centers are essential to stabilize the acyl intermediate 2. The present work shows at an atomistic level the beneficial role of O vacancies and reduced Zr3+ centers for the ketonization process. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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