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FISCHER INDOLE SYNTHESIS OVER HYDROUSZIRCONIA SUPPORTED NIOBIUM OIXDE AND
BORIA-ZIRCONIA CATALYSTS
ZHONG LIANG
(B.Sci.(Hons.), NUS)
A THESIS SUBMITTED
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE
DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY
NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE
2009
i
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
First of all, I would like to express my gratitude to my supervisor Associate
Professor Chuah Gaik Khuan for her great guidance and supervision in my research
project. I also appreciate the help and support from Associate Professor Stephan
Jaenicke.
I would like to thank Dr. Nie Yuntong for her kind advices and assistance
during my work as well as all other members of our research group for their help and
encouragement.
Special thanks must go to my parents for their understanding, encouragement
and support.
Lastly, financial support from National University of Singapore is gratefully
acknowledged.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ii
PAGE
Acknowledgement
i
Table of Contents
ii
Summary
vi
List of Tables
viii
List of Schemes
x
List of Figures
xi
Chapter I
Introduction
1.1 Heterogeneous Catalysis
1
1.1.1 Introduction
1
1.1.2 Solid Acid/Base Catalysts
3
1.1.2.1 Solid Acid Catalysts
5
1.1.2.2 Solid Base Catalysts
8
1.1.2.3 Acid-Base Bifunctional Catalysts
10
1.1.3 Supported Oxide Catalysts
11
1.1.3.1 Introduction
11
1.1.3.2 Zirconia as Support Material
15
1.2 Synthesis of Indoles
18
1.2.1 Introduction
18
1.2.2 Fischer Indole Synthesis
19
1.2.3 Other Methods of Indole Synthesis
21
1.2.4 Catalysts Used in Fischer Indole Synthesis
23
1.3 Aims of Present Study
25
References
26
iii
Chapter II
Experimental
2.1 Powder X-ray Diffraction
31
2.2 Nitrogen Adsorption/Desorption Study
33
2.2.1 BET Surface Area Determination
33
2.2.2 Porosity by Gas Adsorption
35
2.3 Infrared Spectroscopy
36
2.4 Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy
39
2.5 Thermal Analysis
41
2.5.1 Thermogravimetric Analysis
41
2.5.2 Simultaneous TGA/DTA
42
2.6 Determine Acidity Using Amine Titration Method with Indicators
43
2.6.1 Strength and Amount of Solid Acid
43
2.6.2 Determine the Acid Strength Using Hammett Indicator
44
2.6.3 Determine the Number of Acid Sites by Amine Titration
46
2.7 Temperature Programmed Desorption of Ammonia
47
2.8 Catalytic Activity Test
49
2.8.1 Fischer Indole Synthsis of 2-ethyl-3-propyl indole and 2-butyl-3-methyl
indole
49
2.8.2 Analysis of Products by Gas Chromatography and GC-MS
51
2.8.3 Fischer Indole Synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole
53
References
Chapter Ш
55
Study of Hydrous Zirconia Supported Niobium Oxide Catalysts
3.1 Introduction
57
iv
3.2 Preparation of Catalysts
3.2.1 Preparation of Hydrous Zirconia Support
60
60
3.2.2 Wet Impregnation of Niobium Oxide on Hydrous Zirconia Support 61
3.2.3 Synthesis of 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 by Coprecipitation Method
62
3.2.4 Synthesis of 25 wt.% Nb2O5/MCM-41 by Wet Impregnation
62
3.2.5 Recycling of Catalysts
63
3.3 Catalyst Characterization
64
3.3.1 Powder X-ray Diffraction
64
3.3.2 Textural Properties
66
3.3.3 Thermogravimetric Analysis
74
3.3.4 Acidity Test
77
3.4 Catalytic Activity
81
3.4.1 Effect of Niobium Oxide Loadings
81
3.4.2 Effect of Drying Temperature
86
3.4.3 Indole Reaction with Cyclohexanone
86
3.5 Recycling of Catalyst
89
3.5.1 Leaching of Catalysts
89
3.5.2 Regeneration of Catalysts
89
3.6 Conclusion
91
References
92
Chapter IV
Study of Boria-Zirconia Catalysts
4.1 Introduction
95
4.2 Preparation of Catalysts
97
4.2.1 Preparation of boria-zirconia catalysts
97
v
4.2.2 Recycling of Catalysts
98
4.3 Catalyst Characterization
98
4.3.1 Powder X-ray Diffraction
98
4.3.2 Textural Properties
101
4.3.3 Thermal Analysis
104
4.3.4 Acidity Measurement
113
4.4 Catalytic Activity
118
4.4.1 Effect of Boria Loadings
118
4.4.2 Effect of Calcination Temperature
120
4.4.3 Recycling of Catalysts
121
4.5 Conclusion
122
References
125
Summary
vi
For the last 100 years, the synthesis of indoles and their derivatives have been
a research topic of great interest. Every year, several thousands of indoles and indole
derivatives have been synthesized in the research laboratories. The sustained interest
in indoles is due to their wide range of biological activity. The Fischer indole reaction
is an extremely useful and important method for the synthesis of a variety of
biologically active indole-structure compounds for over a century due to its simplicity
and efficiency.
In recent years, zirconia has attracted much attention as both a catalyst and a
catalyst support because of its high thermal stability and the amphoteric character of
its surface hydroxyl groups. The application of zirconia as a catalyst support has been
employed in many industrially important reactions. Zirconia is stable under oxidizing
and reducing conditions and it possesses both acidic and basic properties. Also, unlike
Al2O3, zirconia does not form solid solutions upon addition of a second metal oxide
component. In this study, the Fischer indole reaction over two different solid acid
catalysts, hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide and boria-zirconia catalysts, were
investigated.
Hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalysts with loadings of 10 to
40 wt.% Nb2O5 were prepared by wet impregnation with niobium chloride. The
samples retained the high surface area and pore structure of the support, suggesting a
uniform overlayer. Theoretical monolayers of 0.33 to 2.0 were achieved with these
loadings. The Fischer indole synthesis of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone and with
cyclohexanone was achieved with high conversions. The most active catalysts had
vii
loadings of 25 – 30 wt.% Nb2O5, which is close to a monolayer coverage. The activity
of the catalysts was highest when dried at 100 – 200°C. Use of siliceous MCM-41 as
a support also resulted in an active catalyst. The good activity of the supported
niobium oxide catalysts makes this a green route to the synthesis of indoles. No
leaching of cations was detected and the used catalysts were effectively regenerated
by immersion in 30% H2O2 solution at 40°C.
Boria-zirconia catalysts with boria loadings 3 to 40 wt.% were prepared by wet
impregnation of boric acid on the hydrous zirconia support followed by calcination.
At boria loadings below 25 wt.% , the catalysts had high surface areas. Aggregation
of boron oxide occurred for boria loading of 25 wt.% with theoretically more than
three overlayers on the surface of zirconia support. Infrared spectroscopic study
showed that the first layer of boron oxide was composed of tetrahedral oxygencoordinated BO4 units whereas at boria loading higher than a monolayer, trigonal BO3
units were formed. The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone
was achieved with high conversions. The most active catalysts had loadings of 5 –
10 wt.% B2O3, which is close to a monolayer coverage. This result is similar to that of
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples where catalysts with niobium oxide approaching a
monolayer showed the highest activity. The optimal calcination temperature for the
catalysts was 500°C. The used catalyst could be simply regenerated by recalcining at
500°C, with full recovery of textural properties, acidity, and activity.
LIST OF TABLES
viii
Page
Table 1.1
E factors in the chemical industry
2
Table 1.2
Number of solid acid, base and acid-base bifunctional
catalysts in industry processes
5
Infrared bands of pyridine adsorbed on solid acid catalysts
in the 1700-1400 cm-1 region
39
Table 2.2
Strengths and weaknesses of ICP-AES
40
Table 2.3
Basic indicators used for measurement of acid strength
45
Table 3.1
Acidic properties of surface modified niobium oxide
catalysts
60
Amount of reagents used in preparing the Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
catalysts
62
Table 3.3
Textural properties of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts
68
Table 3.4
Niobium oxide loading and surface coverage
70
Table 3.5
Total amount of water lost (%) in TGA for Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
catalysts
76
Calculation for amount of water lost H2O/oxides (mol/mol)
for Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts
76
Table 2.1
Table 3.2
Table 3.6
Table 3.7
Acid strength of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts measured using
Hammett indicators
79
Table 3.8
Measuring number of acid sites of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
catalysts by n-butylamine titration
80
Table 3.9
Selectivity to 2-butyl-3-methyl indole (linear) and 2-ethyl3-propyl indole (bulky)
85
Table 3.10
Conversion to 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole after 4 h
89
Table 4.1
Amount of reagents used in preparing the boria-zirconia
catalysts
98
Table 4.2
Textural properties of boria-zirconia catalysts
102
Table 4.3
Boria loading and surface coverage
104
Table 4.4
Total amount of water lost (%) in TGA for boria-zirconia
catalysts
108
ix
Table 4.5
Table 4.6
Calculation for amount of water lost H2O/oxides (mol/mol)
for boria-zirconia catalysts
108
Peak maxima of exothermic peaks and enthalpy of
crystallization of hydrous zirconia and boria-zirconia
catalysts
113
Table 4.7
Number of acid sites of boria-zirconia catalysts determined
by NH3 TPD
Table 4.8
Measuring acid strength of boria-zirconia catalysts using
Hammett indicators
117
Number of acid sites of boria-zirconia catalysts measured
by n-butylamine titration
116
Conversion and selectivity of 2-butyl-3-methyl indole
(linear) and 2-ethyl-3-propyl indole (bulky)
119
Table 4.11
Textural properties of fresh and recycled boria-zirconia
122
Table 4.12
Acidity determined by NH3 TPD
123
Table 4.9
Table 4.10
115
LIST OF SCHEMES
x
Page
Scheme 1.1
Zeolite-catalyzed vs. classical Friedel-Crafts acylation
7
Scheme 1.2
Sumitomo vs.
manufacture
8
conventional
process
for
caprolactam
Scheme 1.3
Hydrotalcite-catalyzed condensation reactions
9
Scheme 1.4
Tethered organic bases as solid base catalysts
10
Scheme 1.5
Synthesis of ethyleneimine (EI) from monoethanolamine
(MEA)
11
Scheme 1.6
Drugs containing indole structures
18
Scheme 1.7
Resonance structures of indole
19
Scheme 1.8
Mechanism of Fischer indole synthesis
20
Scheme 1.9
Fischer indole synthesis via Japp-Klingemann reaction
21
Scheme 1.10
Various routes for synthesis of substituted indole
22
Scheme 1.11
Indole synthesis via Sonogashira reaction
23
Scheme 2.1
Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone
50
Scheme 2.2
Fischer indole synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole
54
LIST OF FIGURES
xi
Page
Various arrangement of active oxide component on support
material (a) portion of oxide component buried in the support
(b) oxide component dispersed on the surface of support
material (c) formation of monolayer (d) mixture of
monolayer, aggregated particles and uncovered support
surface.
13
Fig. 2.1
Reflection of X-rays from two planes
32
Fig. 2.2
The five types of adsorption isotherms
35
Fig. 2.3
Gas chromatogram after formation of E/Z phenylhydrazone
50
Fig. 2.4
Gas chromatogram of reaction mixture of Fischer indole
reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptaone
51
Gas chromatogram of reaction mixture of Fischer indole
synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole
54
X-ray diffractograms of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts after
drying at (a) 100°C (b) 200°C (c) 300°C
65
Fig. 3.2
X-ray diffractograms of MCM-41 and 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
66
Fig. 3.3
Nitrogen adsorption/desorption
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts
72
Fig. 1.1
Fig. 2.5
Fig. 3.1
Fig. 3.4
Fig. 3.5
Fig. 3.6
Fig. 3.7
Fig. 3.8
Fig. 3.9
curves
and
pore
of
Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves and pore volume
distribution of MCM-41 and 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
73
Comparison of pore volume distribution (a) hydrous zirconia
supported niobium oxide catalyst with Nb2O5 loadings from
0 – 40 wt.%, drying temperature 100°C (b) MCM-41 and
25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
73
TGA curves of hydrous zirconia , niobium oxide and 10 –
40 wt.% hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalysts
75
Pyridine IR of 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 after evacuation at (a)
25°C (b) 100°C and (c) 200°C.
80
The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3heptanone over (+) niobium oxide, (■) hydrous zirconia, and
(×) 10% (□) 20% (▲) 25% (♦) 30% (○) 40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
82
The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3heptanone over (■) 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 coppt (×) H-beta
(Si/Al = 12.5) (▲) 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41 (♦) 25%
xii
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
82
Fig. 3.10
Linear and bulky indole products with molecular dimensions
in Å
84
Fig. 3.11
Conversion to indole products over 10 – 40 wt. %
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts , Nb2O5 and Zr(OH)4 after drying at
( ) 100°C, ( ) 200°C, and () 300°C
88
The Fischer indole synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole
over (♦) hydrous zirconia, and (□) 10% (■) 20% (×) 30%
(▲) 40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
87
Fig. 3.13
Catalyst leaching test
90
Fig. 3.14
Regeneration of 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
91
Fig. 4.1
X-ray diffractograms of boria-zirconia catalysts with boria
loading from 3 to 40 wt.%, calcination temperature 500°C
100
X-ray diffractograms of 25 wt.% boria zirconia at calcination
temperature 100°C, 500°C, and 650°C
100
Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves and pore volume
distribution of boria-zirconia catalysts with different boria
loadings
105
Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves and pore volume
distribution of 25 wt.% boria-zirconia sample calcined at
100°C, 500°C, and 650°C
106
Infrared spectra of (a) boric acid (b) 3% (c) 5% (d) 10% (e)
20% (f) 25% (g) 30% and (h) 40% boria-zirconia
106
TG–DTA diagrams of (a) hydrous zirconia (b) 3% (c) 5% (d)
10% (e) 20% (f) 25% (g) 30% and (h) 40% boria-zirconia
112
Ammonia TPD profiles of (a) 3% (b) 5% (c) 10% (d) 20%
(e) 25% (f) 30% (g) 40% boria-zirconia (calcination
temperature 500°C) and (h) 25% boria-zirconia (calcination
temperature 650°C)
114
Conversion of indoles over (♦) 3% (■) 5% (▲) 10% (×) 20%
(◊) 25% (□) 30% (+) 40% boria-zirconia
119
Conversion of indoles over 25 wt.% boria-zirconia (♦)
uncalcined (■) calcined at 500°C and (▲) calcined at 650°C
120
Fig. 3.12
Fig. 4.2
Fig. 4.3
Fig. 4.4
Fig. 4.5
Fig. 4.6
Fig. 4.7
Fig. 4.8
Fig. 4.9
xiii
Fig. 4.10
Fig. 4.11
X-ray diffratograms of (a) fresh 5% boria-zirconia (b) 5%
boria-zirconia recycle 2
Conversion of indoles over (♦) 5% boria-zirconia fresh (▲)
5% boria-zirconia recycle 1 (■) 5% boria-zirconia recycle 2
122
123
xiv
Chapter I Introduction
1.1 Heterogeneous Catalysis
1.1.1
Introduction
As the chemistry industry develops nowadays, it is recognized that
environmentally friendly processes become an urgent need and the whole world
reaches a consensus that the developing of green chemistry processes should be one
of the major concerns in modern chemistry industry. In the last one or two decades,
traditional concepts of process efficiency which focus exclusively on chemical yield
is not the only origin of the chemistry industry. Instead, concepts of sustainable
technology are also involved in order to eliminate waste and avoid the use of toxic or
hazardous substances. From the green chemistry point of view, the primary pollution
in the chemistry industry is at the source, and hence eliminating waste at the source is
recommended rather than waste remediation after reaction processes.
The magnitude of the waste problem in the manufacture of chemicals is
measured by “E factor” in the amount of waste produced per kg product.[1,2] E factors
in different segments of the chemistry industry is listed (Table 1.1). These tremendous
quantities of waste consist primarily of inorganic salts, such as sodium chloride,
sodium sulfate, and ammonium sulfate, which are formed during the reaction or in
subsequent neutralization steps. The E factor increases dramatically on going
downstream from bulk to fine chemicals and pharmaceuticals because of two possible
reasons. One reason is that multi-step synthesis is involved in the production of the
latter chemicals, and the other could be the use of stoichiometric (inorganic) reagents
rather than catalytic methodologies.
1
Table 1.1 E factors in the chemical industry[3]
Industry segment
Product tonnagea
E (kg waste/kg product)
Bulk Chemicals
< 104 - 106
50
Pharmaceuticals
10 - 103
25 → > 100
a
Depending on the product this could be the capacity of a single plant or the worldwide production.
Three catalytic methodologies, homogeneous, heterogeneous and enzymatic
catalysis, are commonly used in organic synthesis in the chemistry industry. All three
approaches have their advantages and limitations. Homogeneous catalysis by
organometallic complexes[4] has wide applications in both bulk and fine chemical
industry and is the method chosen for reactions such as carbonylations and
hydrofomyation. Biocatalysis[5] has the advantage of mild reaction conditions and
high chemo-, region-, and enantioselectivity, and it is now increasingly used in fine
chemical manufacture.
Solid, heterogeneous catalysts have the advantages of easy recovery and easy
recycling and are most suitable for continuous processing. Moreover, heterogeneous
catalysis has already been widely applied in oil refining and bulk chemicals
manufacture.[6] The utility of solid catalysts in organic synthesis is feasible according
to the experience and understanding from their industry applications.
In the preparation of solid catalysts that can be employed in the chemistry
industry, the demands for the structures and chemical compositions of the catalysts
must be carefully considered. Three characteristics of solid catalysts are decisive:[3]
2
(1)
The catalytically active surface
―
a sufficiently large active surface area per unit weight or unit volume of
catalyst is required;
―
the catalytically active surface must be stable at the temperatures of
pretreatment and the intended catalytic reaction;
―
the catalytically active surface must have the desired structure and chemical
composition.
(2)
The transport properties
―
the transport of reactant molecules to the catalytically active surface, and of
the reaction products from the surface, must proceed sufficiently rapidly;
―
the transport of thermal energy to and from the catalyst particles must occur
smoothly.
(3)
The mechanical strength
―
for technical applications the mechanical strength of catalyst particles is most
important.
1.1.2 Solid Acid/Base Catalysts
Acid- and base-catalyzed processes are fundamentals in the oil refining and
petrochemical industries as well as in the manufacture of a wide variety of specialty
chemicals such as pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals and flavors and fragrances.
Traditional BrØnsted acids (H2SO4, HF, HCl, p-toluene-sulfonic acid) or Lewis acids
(AlCl3, ZnCl2, BF3) and typical bases (NaOH, KOH, NaOMe, KOBu+) have been
used in many of these industry processes in liquid-phase homogeneous systems or on
inorganic supports in vapor phase systems. The subsequent neutralization step of the
3
used acids and bases causes the generation of inorganic salts which at last are
disposed into aqueous waste streams.
Replacement of traditional BrØnsted and Lewis acids and bases with
recyclable solid catalysts provides an effective solution to this salt generation
problem.[7-10] The manufacturing costs and environmental problems associated with
the neutralization and disposal of traditional acids and bases are reduced as the need
for hydrolytic work-up no longer exists. The use of solid acids and bases as catalysts
provides the following advantages:[11]
(1)
the catalysts can be designed to give high catalytic activity and selectivity, and
also longer catalytic life;
(2)
non-corrosive, safer and easier to handle
(3)
repeated use is possible;
(4)
separation of the catalysts is simple, contamination of the product by trace
amounts of catalyst is avoided;
(5)
disposal of used solid acid and base catalysts costs much less money as the
neutralization step is eliminated
The number of solid acid, base, and acid-base bifunctional catalysts used in
industry processes are shown in Table 1.2. The number of solid acid catalysts is the
largest due to its demand in the great progress of petroleum and petrochemical
industry for the last 40 years. There are only ten processes for solid base catalysis at
present because the study of solid base catalysts starts much later than that of solid
acid catalysts. However, this study is now becoming more active. For acid-base
bifunctional catalysts, the number is estimated to be 14, and the definition of solid
4
acid-base bifunctional catalyst is strictly limited to those having evidence for the
bifunctional catalysis.
Table 1.2 Number of solid acid, base and acid-base bifunctional catalysts in industry
processes[12]
Solid acid catalysts
103
Solid base catalysts
10
Sold acid-base bifucntional catalysts
14
Total
127
1.1.2.1 Solid Acid Catalysts
A solid acid may be generally defined as a solid which changes the color of a
basic indicator or a solid on which a base is chemically adsorbed. From more strictly
BrØnsted and Lewis definitions, a solid acid shows a tendency to donate a proton or to
accept an electron pair. Solid acids can be summarized in different gourps: (1) natural
clay minerals (montmorillonite); (2) zeolites (H-ZSM-5, H-Beta, H-Y); (3) cation
exchange resins (amberlyst-15); (4) heteropoly acids; (5) metal oxides (Al2O3, Nb2O5,
WO3); (6) mixed oxides (SiO2-Al2O3, SiO2-ZrO2, TiO2-WO3).
Solid acid catalysts can be effectively applied to most acid-promoted organic
synthesis.[12] Typcial reactions are various electrophilic aromatic substitutions
including nitrations, and Friedel-Craft alkylations and acylations, and numerous
rearrangement reactions such as the Beckmann and Fries rearrangments.
Friedel-Crafts acylation, which is widely applied in the fine chemicals
industry, is one of the most representative examples where solid acid catalysts have
5
been used. In contrast to the corresponding alkylations, Friedel-Crafts acylations
require more than one equivalent of Lewis acid (AlCl3 or BF3) because of the strong
complexation of the Lewis acid by the ketone product. Zeolite beta is employed as a
catalyst and latter commercialized in Friedel-Crafts acylation by Rhodia.[13] The
discovery of the first zeolite-catalyzed Friedel-Crafts acylation may be considered as
a benchmark in this area. The reaction was carried out in fixed-bed operation, where
the acetylation of anisole with acetic anhydride gave p-methoxyacetophenone
(Scheme 1.1). In the original process, acetyl chloride in combination with 1.1
equivalents of AlCl3 in a chlorinated hydrocarbon solvent generated 4.5 kg of aqueous
effluent, containing AlCl3, HCl, solvent residues and acetic acid per kg of product.
However, when zeolite is employed as an alternative catalyst, the production of HCl
in both the acylation and in the synthesis of acetyl chloride are completely eliminated.
In this solid acid catalyzed process, only 0.035 kg of aqueous effluent is generated,
which is more than 100 times less, and consisted of 99% water, 0.8% acetic acid and
95% vs.
85-95%) is obtained. Also, the number of unit operations is reduced from twelve to
two and the zeolite catalyst is easily recyclable. Hence, the Rhodia process is not only
environmentally superior to the traditional process, but also more economically
favorable. Therefore, a conclusion can be drawn that application of the appropriate
heterogeneous catalyst, in addition to its obvious environmental advantages, also
shows economically benefits.
Another case comes from the manufacture of the bulk chemical caprolactam
which is the raw material for Nylon 6. The conventional process (Scheme 1.2)
involves the reaction of cyclohexanone with hydroxylamine sulfate (or another salt) to
6
produce cyclohexanone oxime, which then undergoes the Beckmann rearrangement in
the presence of stoichiometric amounts of sulfuric acid or oleum. The overall two-step
process generates ca. 4.5 kg of ammonium sulfate per kg of caprolactam in total and
roughly equal amount in each step.
O
+
CH3COCl
OMe
AlCl3
Solvent
+
HCl
+
CH3COOH
OMe
O
+ (CH3CO)2O
H-beta
OMe
OMe
Scheme 1.1 Zeolite-catalyzed vs. classical Friedel-Crafts acylation
Ichihashi and coworkers at Sumitomo[14,15] developed a catalytic vapor phase
Beckmann rearrangement over a high-silica MFI zeolite. When this is combined with
another heterogeneous catalysis technology, developed by Enichem,[16] for the
ammoxidation of cyclohexanone with NH3/H2O2 over the titanium silicalite catalyst
(TS-1), a yield of caprolactam >98% (based on cyclohexanone) is obtained. The
overall process generates caprolactam and two molecules of water from
cyclohexanone, NH3 and H2O2 and is essentially salt-free. This process is currently
being commercialized by Sumitomo in Japan.
Another widely used reaction in fine chemicals manufacture is the acidcatalyzed rearrangement of epoxides to carbonyl compounds. In conventional
methods, Lewis acids such as ZnCl2 or BF3·OEt2 are generally used in stoichiometric
7
amounts. But again, zeolites are found to be effectively solid, recyclable catalysts.
Two commercially relevant examples are the rearrangements of α-pinene oxide[17,18]
and isophorone oxide[19]. The products of these rearrangements are fragrance
intermediates. The rearrangements of α-pinene oxide to campholenic aldehyde was
catalyzed by H-USY zeolite[17] and titanium-substituted zeolite beta[18]. With the latter,
selectivities up to 89% in the liquid phase and 94% in the vapor phase were obtained,
which are greater than the best results obtained with homogeneous Lewis acids.
NH3 + O2
NO
H2
dil. H2SO4
(NH3OH)2SO4
Current Process
H2SO4 (>1 eq)
O
NOH
NH
O
TS-1
Sumitomo Process
H2
+ O2
H2O2
NH3
High Si MFI
vapor phase
Scheme 1.2 Sumitomo vs. conventional process for caprolactam manufacture
1.1.2.2 Solid Base Catalysts
Similar to solid acids, a solid base is defined to be a solid which tends to
accept a proton or to donate an electron pair. Solid base catalysts consist of primarily
basic metal oxides and mixed oxides (MgO, CaO, ZnO, SiO2-MgO, Al2O3-MgO,
TiO2-MgO).
8
The replacement of conventional bases, such as NaOH, KOH and NaOMe, by
recyclable solid bases for a variety of organic reaction, becomes more active recently.
One of the examples is synthetic hydrotalcite clays, or known as layered double
hydroxide (LDHs), which have the general formula Mg8-xAlx(OH)16(CO3)x/2·nH2O.
They are basically hydrated aluminum-magnesium hydroxides possessing a lamellar
structure in which the excess positive charge is compensated by carbonate anions in
the interlamellar space.[20,
21]
Dehydroxylation and decarbonation occur during
calcination of hydrotaciles, which led to the formation of strongly basic mixed
magnesium-aluminum oxides. Reactions involving these strong solid base catalysts
include inter alia, aldol,[22] Knoevenagel[23, 24] and Claisen-schmidt[24] condensations
(Scheme 1.3).
CN
CHO
+
H2C
CO3Et
hydrotalcite
CN
CO2Et
R2
CHO
OH
R1
OH
hydrotalcite
+
COCH3
R1
R2
O
O
O
+
H2O2
hydrotalcite
MeOH; 20°C
O
Scheme 1.3 Hydrotalcite-catalyzed condensation reactions
Another approach for synthesis of recyclable solid bases is to precipitate
organic bases onto the surface of materials like mesoporous silicas.[25, 26] For example,
aminopropyl-silica, which are formed from reaction of 3-aminopropyl(trimethoxy)
9
silane with pendant silanol groups, was reported to be an active catalyst for
Knoeveagel condensations.[27] A stronger solid base called MCM-TBD was obtained
by
functionalisation
of
mesoporous
MCM-41
with
the
guanidine
base,
1,5,7-triazabicyclo-[4,4,0]dec-5-ene (TBD), using a surface glycidylation technique
followed by reaction with TBD (Scheme 1.4). The resulting material was active for
Knoevenagel condensation, Michael addition and Robinson annulation.[28]
N
O
O
OH
1.
(H3CO)3Si
N
N
O
MCM
OH
2.
N
N
H
N
TBD
MCM
Scheme 1.4 Tethered organic bases as solid base catalysts
1.1.2.3 Acid-Base Bifunctional Catalysts
An acid-base bifunctioaal catalyst contains a weak acid site as well as a weak
base site on a solid surface. The simultaneous cooperation of the acid and base sites
exhibits surprisingly high catalytic activity and selectivity towards some organic
synthesis requiring both acid and base. The number of these examples is increasing in
the industrial application of the bifunctional catalysis.
Ethyleneimine derivatives are commercially important chemicals which are
used for the production of pharmaceuticals and various other amines and for the
production of amine type functional polymer for coatings of paper and textile.
Following the Wenker process, ethyleneimine was produced by intramolecular
10
dehydration of monoethanolamine in liquid phase using sulfuric acid and sodium
hydroxide. However, problems such as low productivity and formation of large
amounts of sodium sulfate occurred. In contrast, the vapor phase process using solid
acid-base bifunctional catalyst is more advantageous than the liquid phase process,
because the formation of undesirable by-products such as acetaldehyde, piperidine,
ethylamine, and acetonitrile is minimized. A new efficient catalyst (Si-Ba-Cs-P-O)
has been developed by Nippon Shokubai with the conversion of monoethanolamine
and the selectivity for aziridine being 86% and 81% (Scheme 1.5).[29] The acid and
base strengths of the catalyst are weaker than H0 = +4.8 and H_ = -9.4, respectively.
This reaction is considered to be catalyzed by an acid-base bifunctional mechanism.
OH
OSO3H
H2SO4
H2N
H2N
MEA
(Liquid phase)
NaOH
N
H
EI
Solid catalyst
(Vapor phase)
Scheme 1.5 Synthesis of ethyleneimine (EI) from monoethanolamine (MEA)
1.1.3 Supported Oxide Catalysts
1.1.3.1 Introduction
Supported oxides have several advantages over unsupported materials. Firstly,
the surface area of the catalyst can be increased by supporting the active oxide on a
high surface area material. Also, supports are effective in improving the mechanical
strength, the thermal stability and the lifetime of the catalyst. In addition, the
11
structural features and chemical compositions of supported oxides are usually
different from the bulk oxide.
The active oxide interacts with the surface of the supporting material in
several ways (Fig. 1.1). In the first case, the active component and the support are
intimately mixed throughout the catalyst particle. In this type of arrangement, the
maximum interaction between the support and the active oxide can be achieved.
However, a large portion of the active sites is hindered in the support. The second
way of interaction is through catalytic dispersion. The active oxide molecules are
bound to the surface of the support as a localized binary oxide. The third possibility is
formation of monolayer on the support. Monolayer coverage is considered the best
way of interaction for a number of oxides.[30] The concept of the oxide monolayer was
suggested by Russell and Stokes.[31] By analogy with dispersion of small particles of
active oxide on a support, an oxide is most efficient when present as a layer as thinly
as possible over the surface of the support. The formation of a monolayer or a
monomolecular dispersion maximizes the influence of the support to the active sites.
However, in practice, formation of a monolayer of active oxide on the surface may
not be possible. More frequently, the surface coverage will be the combination of
areas of monolayer accompanied by some larger supported oxide particles and some
uncovered surface.
There are several methods commonly used to prepare supported oxide
catalysts.[32] These methods differ mainly in the manner in which the active
component is placed to contact with the support.
12
Support
Support
(a)
(b)
Support
Support
(c)
(d)
Fig. 1.1 Various arrangement of active oxide component on support material (a)
portion of oxide component buried in the support (b) oxide component dispersed on
the surface of support material (c) formation of monolayer (d) mixture of monolayer,
aggregated particles and uncovered support surface.
Coprecipitation is achieved by treatment of a solution containing both the
support precursor and the catalytic precursor with a suitable precipitating agent. The
resulting precipitate contains both the active component and the support material. The
main disadvantage of using this method is that a large portion of the active sites is
hindered in the support, and hence unavailable for catalysis.
Another method for preparing supported oxide catalysts involves the
dispersion of the active species or its precursor onto the surface of a support oxide.
This can be achieved by equilibrium adsorption, incipient wetness or dry
impregnation.
13
The incipient wetness impregnation method makes use of a solution of the
active species to fill the pores of the support material. This is normally achieved by
slowly addition of the solution to the solid support material with continuous stirring.
The concentration of the solution can be adjusted to give the desired catalytic loading.
Once the incipient wetness point is reached, the solvent is filtered or evaporated and
the solid residue is calcined to give the catalyst. Depending on the solubility of the
catalytic precursor, aqueous or organic solutions are prepared. The disruption of pores
in the support may occur when high surface tension solvents such as water are
evaporated resulting in a decrease of the surface area of the catalyst. The
concentration of the precursor solution affects the average size of the catalytic
particles. Normally, high catalytic loadings tend to give larger particles than low
loadings. The drying step also has effect on the size of catalytic particles. A slow
drying step makes the catalytic particles migrate towards the external surface of the
support. Therefore, in order to obtain a uniform distribution of active sites throughout
the support, a quick drying step is necessary.
By mixing two or more different oxides together, materials with acidic
properties different from that of bulk oxides can be generated. Three different
proposals have been formulated to predict the acidity of mixed oxides. (i) In the case
where the mixed oxide is an actual solid solution, acidity is created if the charge of
the guest cation is lower than the charge of the host cation. Normally, BrØnsted
acidity can be created as charge balance. Zeolite is a well-known example of this type
of acidity generation. BrØnsted acidity is created by the substitution of tetrahedral Si4+
by A13+. (ii) According to Tanabe et al.,[33,34] Lewis or BrØnsted acidity may also be
formed if the guest cation preserves its coordination number with a surrounding of
14
oxide ions in host oxide. Significant examples are mixed oxides e.g. TiO2-SiO2,
ZrO2-SiO2 and Nb2O5-SiO2, or Nb2O5-TiO2, in which higher acidity is observed than
their individual oxide components. (iii) Finally, Seiyama[35] proposed that acidity
appears at the boundary where two oxides contact. In this case, each cation preserves
its own environment. Only the oxide ion at the boundary is coordinated to two
different cations. This model may be applied in the case of the dispersion of an oxide
on a support.
1.1.3.2 Zirconia as Support Material
In recent years, zirconia has attracted much attention as both a catalyst and a
catalyst support because of its high thermal stability and the amphoteric character of
its surface hydroxyl groups.
Zirconia has the following advantages when used as a catalyst support:[36] (i) it
interacts strongly with the active phase; (ii) it possesses high thermal stability and is
more chemically inert than the classical supported oxides; (iii) it is the only metal
oxide which may possess all four chemical properties: acidity, basicity, reducing
ability and oxidizing ability; (iv) it exhibits super-acidic properties when modified
with small quantities of sulfate ions. The extreme hardness and high specific mass of
zirconia can also be an advantage for its potential use as catalyst support.
The application of zirconia as a catalyst support has been employed in many
industrially important reactions such as hydroprocessing,[37] oxidation of alcohols,[38,39]
and synthesis of methanol and higher alcohols.[40]
15
Structure of Zirconia
Zirconia goes through three stages of crystalline phase transformations. The
monoclinic phase is stable up to 1200°C, the tetragonal phase is stable up to 1900°C,
and the cubic phase is stable above 1900°C. In addition, a metastable tetragonal form
is also found and is stable up to 650°C. The metastable tetragonal, the monoclinic,
and the tetragonal zirconia are often used as catalysts. Hydrous zirconia is used as
catalyst for organic synthesis as well.
Compared with SiO2 and Al2O3 which are often used as catalyst supports, the
surface area of zirconia is not very large. The surface area depends much on the
calcination temperature. After calcined at 600°C, the surface area is in the range of 40
- 100 m2/g. By addition of another metal oxide component, a higher surface area may
be obtained. An alternative for increase of surface area is by dispersing zirconia on
the high surface area supports.
Calcination of hydrous zirconia which is formed by hydrolysis of zirconium
salts gives zirconium oxide. The preparation method affects the crystal forms of
zirconia. Formation of monoclinic phase upon calcination is preferred if the zirconia
precursor is aged for a long period while the tetragonal phase is dominant if aging is
omitted.
Surface Properties of Zirconia
The surface of the metal oxides can exhibit acidic, basic, oxidizing, and
reducing properties. Most metal oxides show only one of the properties. However, for
zirconia, both acidic and basic properties are present on the surface though their
16
strength is rather weak. Meanwhile, zirconia also exhibits oxidizing and reducing
properties. In solutions, acid and base are neutralized immediately. However, they
may exist independently at the surface of solid materials. The acidic and basic sites on
the surface of oxides work both independently and cooperatively. Therefore, zircoinia
can be considered as an acid-base bifunctional oxide.
By measuring the amount of chemically adsorbed ammonia and CO2, the
numbers of acid sites and base sites can be estimated, respectively. Zirconia calcined
at 600°C exhibits 0.6 pmol/m2 of acidic sites and 4 pmol/m2 of base sites. Pyridine
absorption infrared spectra show the presence of only Lewis acid sites, but not
BrØnsted acid sites.[41]
Zirconia calcined at 500°C exhibits two types of OH groups at 3780 and
3680 cm-1.[42,
43]
These two bands at 3780 and 3680 cm-1 are assigned to be the
terminal and bridged OH groups, respectively.[43]
Application as Catalyst Support
Zirconia is stable under oxidizing and reducing conditions and it possesses
both acidic and basic properties. Also, unlike Al2O3, zirconia does not form solid
solutions upon addition of a second metal oxide component. Therefore, the use of
zirconia as a support may be promising in despite of its relative low surface area.
When zirconia is used as catalyst support, pronounced catalytic activities can
be obtained. One example is the supported perovskite (La-Sr-Co-O) catalyst for the
propane oxidation.[44] Both of the high surface area supports, Al2O3 and SiO2, were
17
not effective in promoting the activity of perovskite, but when perovskite was
dispersed on zirconia surface, this supported catalyst exhibited activity 10 times
higher than that of the original perovskite. Zirconia was also found to be a superior
support for Re and Rh in the hydrogenation of CO2.[45-47]
1.2 Synthesis of Indoles
1.2.1 Introduction
For the last 100 years, the synthesis of indoles and their derivatives have been
a research topic of great interest. The first synthesis of indole was in 1866 and later in
1883, the Fischer indole synthesis was discovered, which is still the most versatile
method for preparing indoles nowadays.[48] Every year, several thousands of indoles
and indole derivatives have been synthesized in the research laboratories. The
sustained interest in indoles is due to their wide range of biological activity.[49] The
indole ring structures in the amino acid tryptophan and metabolites of tryptophan are
important in the biological function of both plants and animals. The indole ring
structure is also found in many natural products such as the indole alkaloids, fungal
metabolites and marine natural products. Many indole derivatives have been used as
drugs. Indomethacin is one of the first non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents;
sumatriptan is used in the treatment of migraine headache and pindolol is one of the
β-adrenergic blockers (Scheme 1.6).
CH2CO2H
H3CO
CH2CH2NH2
H3CHNO2SH2C
CH3
OH
OCH2CHCH2NHCH(CH3)2
N
N
H
O
Cl
indomethacin
sumatriptan
N
H
pindolol
Scheme 1.6 Drugs containing indole structures[50]
18
Indole is classified as a π-excessive aromatic compound. It is isoelectronic
with naphthalene, with two of the ten π-electrons from the heterocyclic nitrogen atom
(Scheme 1.7). The aromaticity of the ring is fundamental to the success of many
synthetic methods.
N
H
N
H
N
H
Scheme 1.7 Resonance structures of indole[50]
1.2.2 Fischer Indole Synthesis
For over a century, the Fischer indole reaction has remained as an extremely
useful and important method for the synthesis of a variety of biologically active
indole-structure compounds.[51] The Fischer indole reaction is one of the simplest and
most efficient methods by which enolizable N-arylhydrazones are easily transformed
into indoles. In the Fischer indole synthesis, the ketone or aldehyde and the
arylhydrazine are generally mixed and heated to form the hydrazone intermediate.
Without isolation of the intermediate, indoles are formed by simply adding the
appropriate acid or acid catalyst. Advantages of the Fischer indole reaction include
the acceptance of a wide range of compatible functional groups around the aromatic
ring and lack of a requirement for a functional group to form the new C-C and C-N
bonds. The mechanism of the Fischer indole synthesis involves a complex series of
acid-catalyzed reactions and rearrangements (Scheme 1.8). The generally key steps
are (i) the condensation of arylhydrazines with ketones to form arylhydrazones, (ii)
rearrangement of the arylhydrazones to form ene-hydrazines (iii) acid-catalyzed
19
[3,3]-sigmatropic rearrangement followed by intramolecular displacement of NH3 to
produce indoles.[52,53] When an unsymmetrical ketone is used, the rearrangement of
arylhydrazones results in the formation of a mixture of ene-hydrazine isomers.
R1
R1
H+
N
H
N
R2
R1
N N
H H H
R1
R2
NH2
NH
R2
R1
R2
N
H
-NH2
NH2
R2
N
Scheme 1.8 Mechanism of Fischer indole synthesis
The arylhydrazones are frequently prepared via condensation of an
arylhydrazine with a ketone. However, as few arylhydrazines are commercially
available, an alternative way can be used to prepare the hydrazones by reduction of
aryl diazonium salts, which are obtained from the appropriate aniline. Aryl diazonium
salts can be converted directly to hydrazones via the Japp-Klingemann reaction
(Scheme 1.9).[54] In the Japp-Klingemann reaction, the aryl diazonium salts are firstly
treated with an active methylenyl or methinyl compound in acidic or basic
environment to generate azo intermediates. The azo intermediates then react with
β-ketoesters or β-ketoacids to form hydrazones. With β-ketoesters, deacylation occurs,
but if β-ketoacids are used, decarboxylation happens with the carboxylic acid group
being expulsed. The Japp-Klingemann procedure avoids the formation and use of
arylhydrazines, which can be difficult to prepare and handle in some cases.
20
R2
O
CO2R1
+ R
N2
N
H
R2
N
CO2R1
CH2R2
CO2R1
N
H
R2
O
+ R
N2
CO2H
N
H
R2
N
CO2R
CH2R2
CO2R
N
H
Scheme 1.9 Fischer indole synthesis via Japp-Klingemann reaction
.
1.2.3 Other Methods of Indole Synthesis
Other than Fischer indole synthesis, several classical methods have been
reported
(Scheme
1.10),
including
the
Batcho–Limgruber
synthesis
from
o-nitrotoluenes and dimethylformamide acetals,[55] the Gassman synthesis from
N-haloanilines,[56,57] the Madelung cyclisation of Nacyl- o-toluidines[58,59] and the
reductive cyclization of o-nitrobenzyl ketones.[60]
One of the famous indole synthesis methods is the heteroannulation of
2-iodoanilines with alkynes via the Sonogashira cross-coupling reaction catalyzed by
the palladium-copper catalysts.[62 - 65] This approach also presents many advantages:[66]
(1) The Sonogashira reaction has been proved to be a reliable reaction for the
synthesis of arylethylenes in high yields. (2) This indole synthesis method is widely
employed as a key step for the synthesis of natural and pharmaceutical products. (3) It
tolerates a broad variety of functional groups on the aromatic rings. (4) It is
completely regiospecific at 2,3-positions in the indole ring as the 2,3-regioselectivity
is directed by the choice of the alkyne used in the Sonogashira cross-coupling.
21
O
R2
N
NH
R1
R2
N
O
R3
+
R3
h
R
R3
N
N
R
R1
R2
O
R3
b
f
+
R1
a
R2
R3
N2
NHNH2
g
R1
R2
Z
Z
N2
O
+
R3
R3
+
OH/R1
N
N
R2
R
e
H
R3
R
c
H
d
NO2
R3
+
H2/Rh/C
+ CO/H2
N
O
NO2
O
P
RO
N
(OEt)2
R
H
N
R1
O
O
R
R1
+
O
P
RO
(OEt)2
N2
O
Scheme 1.10 Various routes for synthesis of substituted indole[61]
Generally, the indole synthesis via the Sonogashira reaction is carried out in
two steps (Scheme 1.11). (1) The palladium-copper catalyzed Sonogashira crosscoupling between a 2-aminoaryl halide and an alkyne. (2) A copper(I) or palladium(II)
catalyzed ring-closure by hydroamination/cyclization to give the indole product. A
two-step procedure is generally required since the Sonogashira cross-coupling is the
most
efficient
under
mild
reaction
conditions,
while
the
intramolecular
heteroannulation requires stronger reaction conditions in order to obtain high
conversion, such as the use of strong bases and high temperature. However, when the
aniline is activated, for example, a presence of electron withdrawing substitution
22
groups like sulfonyl, the heteroannulation can occur under relatively mild reaction
conditions.
However, for industrial applications this methodology remains too expensive,
mainly due to the high costs of catalysts and costs in multiple steps of handling,
separation and refining procedures. No general simple and economical procedure has
been described via the Sonogashira cross-coupling reaction with heterogeneous
catalysts.
Ph
H
I
+
NH2
Ph
[Pd-Cu]
[Pd-Cu]
NH2
Ph
N
H
Scheme 1.11 Indole synthesis via Sonogashira reaction
1.2.4 Catalysts Used in Fischer Indole Synthesis
The Fischer indole synthesis is an acid-catalyzed reaction. Both BrØnsted and
Lewis acids are effective. Catalysts employed include mineral acids (HCl, H2SO4,
H3PO4), organic acids (acetic acid), and metal-halide Lewis acids (ZnCl2).
A neutralization procedure is required after reaction if the traditional
homogeneous BrØnsted and Lewis acids are employed in the synthesis. The disposal
of salts or metal-containing waste generated is environmental unfriendly and highly
costly. Applying heterogeneous solid acid catalysts for the Fischer synthesis avoids
waste formation and has the advantages of simple separation, recovery, and
regeneration of the catalysts. The possible solid catalysts include the acidic forms of
ion-exchange resins, oxides such as silica, alumina and silica-alumina, and zeolites.
23
Suvorov et al.[67] investigated the cyclization of isolated aldehyde and ketone
phenylhydrazones using γ-alumina. The reaction was conducted in the vapor phase, at
atmospheric pressure and temperatures around 300°C. A maximum yield of 60% was
obtained
from
acetaldehyde
phenylhydrazone
accompanied
with
thermal
decomposition of the hydrazone and the formation of benzene and aniline by-products.
Zeolites are microporous materials with pore diameters comparable with
molecular dimensions. The shape selectivity of zeolites has wide applications in oil
refining and bulk chemicals catalysis. The spatially restricted reaction environment of
zeolite pores can be used in the Fischer indole reaction to control the selectivity
towards the less bulky isomeric product. Thus, in addition to the advantages of easy
recovery and regeneration, zeolites provide possibility of regioselective formation of a
single indole isomer. The large-pore zeolites, such as beta, mordenite and faujasites X
and Y are most applied in fine-chemical catalysis.
Prochatska et al.[68] studied the Fischer indole synthesis of phenylhydrazine
with five different unsymmetrical ketones using fourteen different zeolites in one-pot
reactions. Yields of 80 - 90% were obtained from the phenylhydrazones of
3-hexanone, 3-undecanone, 5-methyl-3-heptanone, and 1-phenyl-2-butanone using
large-pore zeolites. As the most striking example of shape selectivity, Prochazka et
al.[68] reported that in the synthesis of indole from phenylhydrazine and 1-phenyl-2butanone, the selectivity of the least bulky isomer, 2-benzyl-3-methylindole was 93%
where mordenite is used as catalyst, whereas only 2-ethyl-3-phenylindole was formed
if the reaction was performed in acetic acid.
24
1.3 Aims of Present Study
Fischer indole synthesis is important and widely applied in industrial production
of indoles and their derivatives. The reaction involves acid-catalyzed condensation
and cyclization in which water is liberated. Niobium oxide is a water-tolerant catalyst.
Deposition of niobium oxide at the surface of hydrous zirconia support generates a
novel catalyst with high acidity and water tolerance.
Boria-zirconia is considered as a superacid catalyst. It is used for various solid
acid-catalyzed reactions. The properties and activity of boria-zirconia catalysts can be
improved by proper control of variable factors such as loadings and dispersion of
boria. The recycling of boria-zirconia is convenient.
The aims of this study include:
(1)
Synthesis of hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalysts and boriazirconia catalysts. The factors of niobium oxide/boria loadings and the
calcination temperatures are varied.
(2)
Characterization of the catalysts using techniques including powder X-ray
diffraction
(XRD),
inductively
coupled
plasma
atomic
emission
spectroscopy (ICP-AES), infrared spectroscopy (IR), thermogravimetry
(TG), differential thermal analysis (DTA), amine titration, and temperature
programmed desorption of ammonia (NH3 TPD).
(3)
Catalytic testing of the hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalysts
and boria-zirconia catalysts in the Fischer indole synthesis of
phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone and cyclohexanone.
(4)
Regeneration of the catalysts.
25
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30
Chapter II Experimental
2.1 Powder X-ray Diffraction
X-ray diffraction is one of the tools for the investigation of the structures of
materials.[1] X-ray diffraction was initially applied only for the determination of
crystal structure. Later on, this technology was applied in other areas as well. For
example, it is applied to the study of phase equilibria and the measurement of particle
size nowadays.
The powder X-ray diffraction method was first invented independently by
German scientists Debye and Scherrer in 1916 and by Hull from the United States in
1917. This method generally makes use of the diffraction of monochromatic x-rays by
a powder specimen (Fig. 2.1). Diffraction occurs whenever the Bragg law (equation
2.1) is satisfied:
nλ = 2dsinθ
(2.1)
where n is an integer normally taken as 1, d is interplanar spacing,
θ is the angle of diffraction, and λ is the wavelength of X-ray.
Knowing the wavelength of the X-ray λ and the diffraction angle θ, the interplanar
spacing d of various planes can be determined.
The interplanar spacing d, measured at certain diffraction angles to the planes,
is a function both of the plane indices (hkl) and the lattice constants (a, b, c, α, β, γ).
For cubic system, the spacing equation is in a relatively simple form (equation 2.2):
31
d=
a
(2.2)
h + k 2 + l2
2
In the tetragonal system the equation contains both a and c as they are not equal
(equation 2.3):
d=
a
(2.3)
h 2 + k 2 + l 2 (a 2 / c 2 )
Using these spacing equations, the plane indices corresponding to the right diffraction
angle can be determined.
θ
d
x
Fig. 2.1 Reflection of X-rays from two planes
The particle size of very small crystals can be estimated by the Scherrer
formula (equation 2.4) from the width of their diffraction curves:
32
τ=
Kλ
β cos θ
(2.4)
where τ is the mean crystallite dimension, K is the shape factor,
λ is the X-ray wavelength, θ is the Bragg angle,
and β is the line broadening at half the maximum intensity (FWHM) in radians
In this study, the crystalline phases of the samples were determined by the
powder X-ray diffraction using a Siemens D5005 diffractometer. The Cu anode was
used and operated at 40 kV and 40 mA. The measured area was set to be 20 × 20 mm.
The range in a typical scan started from 2θ = 1.5° to 70°. A step size of 0.02°, and a
measurement time of 1 second/step were used. By comparing with the JCPDS files,
the crystalline phases of the samples can be verified except for the samples with
amorphous phase.
2.2 Nitrogen Adsorption/Desorption Study
2.2.1 BET Surface Area Determination
The measurement of adsorbed vapors by a dispersed powder material gives
valuable information on its surface area and its pore structure. It is possible to use the
adsorption data to determine the specific surface area of the solid. Also in the case of
a porous material, the pore size distribution can be estimated. Three main types of
method are developed for the determination of adsorption isotherms, which are
volumetric, gravimetric, and dynamic methods. Among these three methods, the most
commonly used one is the volumetric method.
Nitrogen is often chosen to be one of the most suitable adsorbate to determine
the surface area for nonporous, macroporous, or mesoporous solids. The BET
33
monolayer of nitrogen is usually assumed in a closed packed form. To measure the
surface area, first the quantity of gas adsorbed as a single layer of molecules on a
sample should be determined. This adsorption happens at temperature near the boiling
point of the adsorbate gas, and for nitrogen, the temperature is 77 K. The area
occupied by one molecule of nitrogen has been estimated to be 0.162 nm2/mol[2]. The
surface area is then calculated from the number of adsorbed molecules multiplied by
the area occupied by each molecule.
In 1938, Stephen Brunauer, Paul Hugh Emmett, and Edward Teller together
published the BET theory and this theory is later on named with the first initials of
their family names. BET theory is an extension of the Langmuir theory. It develops
the isotherm of monolayer molecular adsorption to multilayer adsorption with the
following hypotheses. Hypothesis 1: gas molecules physically adsorbed on a solid in
layers infinitely. Hypothesis 2: there is no interaction between each adsorption layer.
Hypothesis 3: the Langmuir theory can be applied to each layer. The BET equation is
written in the form (equation 2.5):
1
c −1 ⎛ P ⎞
1
=
⎜ ⎟ +
v [( P0 / P) − 1]
vmc ⎝ P0 ⎠ vm c
(2.5)
where P and P0 are the equilibrium and saturation pressure of adsorbates at the
temperature of adsorption, v is the adsorbed gas quantity, vm is the monolayer
adsorbed gas quantity, and c is the BET constant.
The monolayer capacity vm, is defined as the quantity of the adsorbate that can
be accommodated in a completely filled, single layer of molecules on the surface of
34
the solid. The specific surface area S (m2g-1) is directly proportional to the monolayer
capacity. These two values are related by the simple equation (equation 2.6):[3]
S=
vm
· N · Am × 10-20
M
(2.6)
where vm is the monolayer capacity in grams of adsorbate per gram of solid, M is the
molecular weight of the adsorbate, Am (Å2) is the area occupied per molecule of
adsorbate in the completed monolayer and the factor 10-20 is introduced in order to
give S in square metres per gram.
Volume Adsorbed/Desorbed (cm3/g)
2.2.2 Porosity by Gas Adsorption
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
Fig. 2.2 The five types of adsorption isotherms
35
In 1945, Brunauer proposed the classification of the different kinds of
adsorption isotherms into five general forms (Fig. 2.2). Type I or Langmuir
physisorption isotherms are characteristic of monolayer adsorption, and often
exhibited by microporous solids having very small pores that all filled up at once.
Type II isotherms are characteristic of multilayer adsorption, which is normally
obtained from nonporous or macroporous adsorbent. Occasionally type III adsorption
isotherms are observed where initially there is very little adsorption, but additional
adsorption occurs more easily due to strong adsorbate-adsorbate interactions. Type IV
and type V isotherms usually represent multilayers of gas adsorbed onto the surface of
the pores in a mesoporous solid. Initially, the type IV or type V adsorption resembles
a type II or a type III adsorption respectively.
The nitrogen adsorption–desorption isotherms for the solid samples were
measured using a Micromeritics Tristar porosimeter. Prior to measurements, the
samples were degassed for 4 h under a flow of nitrogen at temperatures of 100°C –
300°C. 30 – 50 mg of sample was usually measured and liquid nitrogen bath was used
to cool down the sample cells to the boiling temperature of nitrogen, 77 K.
2.3 Infrared Spectroscopy
Infrared spectroscopy is one of the most widely used methods in both
research and industry. It is simple and reliable, and large applications are found in
works as quality control and dynamic measurement.
Infrared spectroscopy has been highly successfully applied in both organic and
inorganic chemistry. In heterogeneous catalysis, infrared spectroscopy can be used for
36
study of solid catalysts.[4] Such characterization can be very useful in determining the
nature of the support, and surface groups such as hydroxyls on the suface of oxides.
Bands arising from the bulk structure of catalysts or supports can readily be observed.
From the infrared spectra of supported metals oxides, the information of the bonding
modes of metal atoms with oxygen atoms can be determined, and hence the
coordination structures of the supported and bulk metal oxides are determined.
A small amount of sample was diluted with KBr salt (ca. 1:100), and after
thorough mixing and grinding, wafers were prepared by pressing the fine powder in a
13 mm die under vacuum at ~15,000 psi. FT-IR spectra of samples in the wavelength
region 4000-400 cm-1 were recorded at room temperature. A Bio-Rad FTS 165 FT-IR
spectrometer was used at a resolution of 2 cm-1, and 32 scans were measured and
averaged.
Identifying the nature of the acid sites on acidic oxides and zeolites using a
base molecule probe is another popular technique. Studies of ammonia and pyridine
adsorbed on solid acid surfaces by infrared spectroscopy are useful to distinguish
between BrØnsted and Lewis acid sites and to independently evaluate the amounts of
the two different acid sites.
Ammonia is one of the widely used probes for the characterization of the acid
properties of solid acids. However, when ammonia is used as a detector for surface
acidity, several complications may arise. Ammonia is such a strong base (pKa ~5) that
it will react with extremely weak acid site. Therefore, it is not a very specific probe
molecule which provides ideal properties for studies of surface acidity. Moreover,
37
dissociation of adsorbed ammonia to form NH2 and NH surface groups has been
observed at temperature 500 K on partially dehydroxylated oxide surfaces.[5, 6]
While pyridine is a relatively strong base (pKa ~9), it is significantly weaker
than ammonia. The pyridine molecule can be coordinately bonded to aprotic sites, and
it can also be protonated to form the pyridinium ion PyH+ on acidic OH groups or
form hydrogen bonded pyridine with less acidic groups. The infrared spectra of
pyridine chemisorbed on various solid in the region 1700 cm-1 to 1400 cm-1 contain
clearly distinct characteristic bands of pyridinium ion PyH+ and hydrogen bonded
pyridine,[7] so the corresponding types of surface acid sites can be easily distinguished.
Infrared spectra measured for pyridine adsorption on solid acids in the region 17001400 cm-1 are presented in Table 2.1. Pyridinium ion from BrØnsted acid sites gave
characteristic IR absorption bands at about 1485-1500 cm-1, 1540 cm-1, 1620 cm-1 and
1640 cm-1. The characteristic bands of pyridine coordinately bonded to Lewis acid
sites appeared at 1447-1460 cm-1, 1448-1503 cm-1, ~1580 cm-1 and 1600-1633 cm-1.
Hydrogen bonded pyridine showed adsorption bands around 1440-1470 cm-1, 14851490 cm-1, and 1580-1600 cm-1.
The sample was pressed into an 8-10 mg thin self-supporting disk of 13 mm
diameter. It was placed in a Pyrex cell with NaCl windows and degassed at 300°C for
2 h under vacuum. After cooling down to room temperature, an IR spectrum of the
pellet was measured and recorded as the background. The sample was then dosed with
pyridine at 22 mbar for 15 minutes and evacuated at room temperature for 1 h before
the first pyridine adsorption IR spectrum was measured. The spectrum of the pyridine
adsorbed on the sample is obtained by subtracting the pyridine adsorption IR
38
spectrum with the background. Subsequently, the sample was heated in vacuum at
100°C and 200°C for 1 h at each temperature, and cooled to room temperature for
measuring the IR spectra. A Bio-rad FTS 165 FT-IR spectrometer was used for
recording the spectra at a resolution of 2 cm-1 and 64 scans were averaged.
Table 2.1 Infrared bands of pyridine adsorbed on solid acid catalysts in the 17001400 cm-1 regiona[7]
H-bonded pyridine
Coordinately bonded
Pyridinium ion
pyridine
1400-1447 (v.s.)
1447-1460 (v.s.)
1485-1490 (w)
1488-1503 (v)
1485-1500 (v.s.)
1580-1600 (s)
~1580 (v)
1540 (s)
1600-1633 (s)
~1620 (s)
~1640 (s)
a
Band intensities: v.s.―very strong; s―strong; m―medium; w―weak; v―variable
2.4 Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy
Inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES) is an
analytical technique used for the detection of trace metals. It is composed of two parts.
The inductively coupled plasma produce excited atoms and ions and the
electromagnetic radiation emitted gives an emission spectroscopy at wavelengths of
particular elements. The intensity of the emission is corresponding to the
concentration of the element in the sample.
39
ICP-AES has a lot of strengths (Table 2.2). One of the most important features
is that ICP-AES produces an extremely line-rich spectrum, and therefore spectral lines
selected can be ideally free from spectral overlap with those from other species.
Table 2.2 Strengths and weaknesses of ICP-AES[8]
Strengthes
Weaknesses
● 108 counts s-1 per atom
● Rich spectrum choice of spectral lines
● Large number of resolution elements
― Spectra clutter (“rich” spectra)
― Spectral interferences
● Atom, ion lines
● High background (continuum, bands)
● Straightforward spatial averaging
● Detector noise (low work function)
● Convenient diagnostics
● Cannot “see” some oxides, multiply
― Tg, Texc, ne, M(II)/M(I), MO, etc
● Simple instrumentation
charged ions
● Cannot resolve most isotopes
― Alignment (visual), familiarity
However, despite all the strengths, ICP-AES also has its shortcomings
(Table 2.2). For example, the line-rich spectra produce tremendous spectral clutter as
well. Spectral interferences thus can not be avoided and this increases the difficulty in
the identification of chosen spectral lines. Futher, the desired spectral lines and also
the spectral clutter are superimposed with a high background, which comes from the
argon ion-electron recombination continuum. This high background compromises
detection limits in ICP-AES, so the detectors used in AES are relatively inefficient
and noisy compared with those in ICP-MS (mass spectrometry). Lastly, some metal
oxides are unfortunately invisible to ICP-AES, and also dectection for the existence of
multiply charged ions is diffcult. Most importantly, isotope-induced spectral shifts for
40
elements in the center of the Periodic Table are too small to be resolved. Isotopeanalysis capability is very limited in ICP-AES.
A Thermo Jarrell Ash Duo Iris ICP-AES machine was used for ICP-AES
analysis. For sample preparation, 1 – 5 mg of solid sample was weighed using
microbalance and dissolved with two drops of 40% HF. The prepared solution was
diluted with ultrapure water and finally neutralized with excess boric acid.
2.5 Thermal Analysis
The analytical experimental techniques used to investigate the behavior of a
sample during heating or cooling are named as thermal analysis (TA). Conventional
TA techniques include differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), differential thermal
analysis (DTA), thermogravimetry (TG), thermomechanical analysis (TMA), and
dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) etc.
2.5.1 Thermogravimetric Analysis
Thermogravimetric analysis (TG) is an experimental technique in which the
weight or the mass of a sample is measured as a function of temperature. In a typical
TGA process, the sample is heated at a constant heating rate (dynamic measurement)
or held at a certain temperature (isothermal measurement). However, in some other
cases, such as in sample controlled TGA (SCTA) experiments, non-linear temperature
programs are used. Based on different information required about the sample, the
temperature programs used are of different types. Additionally, the atmosphere in the
TGA experiment is crucial to the results. Reactive, oxidizing or inert atmosphere can
41
be used, and in certain experiments changing in the atmosphere during a measurement
is also possible if necessary.
A TGA curve is used to represent the results of a TGA measurement. In a
TGA curve, usually mass or percent mass is plotted as y-axis and temperature is
plotted as x-axis. Mass changes occur when the sample loses material in several
different ways or reacts with the surrounding atmosphere. Steps in the TGA curve are
created according to the mass change. The different effects that causes a sample to
lose, or even gain mass include the following:[9]
(1)
Evaporation of volatile constituents; drying; desorption and adsorption of
gases, moisture and other volatile substances; loss of water of crystallization.
(2)
Oxidation of metals in air or oxygen.
(3)
Oxidative decomposition of organic substances in air or oxygen.
(4)
Thermal decomposition in an inert atmosphere with the formation of gaseous
products.
(5)
Heterogeneous chemical reactions in which a starting material is taken up
from the atmosphere or reactions in which a product is evolved.
(6)
Ferromagnetic materials.
(7)
Uptake or loss of water in a humidity controlled experiment.
2.5.2 Simultaneous TGA/DTA
At the same time with the actual thermogravimetric measurement, the DTA
signal can be recorded with the equipped thermobalances. The DTA curve shows the
energetic nature during weight loss as well as those thermal effects that are not
accompanied by a change in mass, for example, melting, crystallization or a glass
42
transition. Endothermic DTA peaks usually correspond to the weight loss processes,
while other processes can produce exothermic peaks. These peaks are often used to
determine the onset temperatures of particular thermal effects.
A TA SDT 2960 Double Beam Simultaneous DTA-TGA was used in this
study. The samples were kept isothermally at 100°C for 30 min to remove any
physically adsorbed water before increasing the temperature. The thermal analysis
was then carried out by heating the samples to 900°C with a heating ramp 20 °C/min.
The atmosphere used is flowing air at velocity 100 mL/min.
2.6 Determine Acidity Using Amine Titration Method with Indicators
2.6.1 Strength and Amount of Solid Acid
The acid strength of a solid is defined as the ability to convert a neutral base
absorbed on the surface into its conjugate acid form. When proton transfer occurs
from the surface to the adsorbate, the acid strength is expressed by the Hammett
acidity function H0 (equation 2.7):[10]
H0 = pKa + log
[B]
[BH + ]
(2.7)
where [B] and [BH+] are, respectively, the concentrations of the neutral base (basic
indicator) and its conjugate acid, and pKa equals to pK BH + .
In the other case, instead of proton transfer, an electron pair is transferred,
from the adsobate to the surface. H0 is expressed by (equation 2.8):[10]
43
H0 = pKa + log
[B]
[AB]
(2.8)
where [AB] is the concentration of the neutral base which reacted with the Lewis acid
or electron pair acceptor, A.
The amount of acid on a solid is usually expressed as the number or mmol of
acid sites per unit weight or per unit surface area of the solid. The amount of a base
used to react with the solid acid is measured as the amount of acidity.
For the determination of strength and amount of a solid acid, two main
methods are generally applied: an amine titration method using indicators and a
gaseous base adsorption method.
2.6.2 Determine the Acid Strength using Hammett Indicator
The acid strength of a solid can be determined from the color of suitable
indicators adsorbed on its surface. If the color corresponds to the acid form of the
indicator, the value of the H0 function of the solid surface is equal to or lower than the
pKa of the conjugate acid of the indicator. Great acid strength is indicated by the low
values of H0. Thus, for indicators undergoing color changes in this way, the lower the
pKa, the greater the acid strength of the solid. The indicators used for the
determination are listed in Table 2.3.
44
Table 2.3 Basic indicators used for measurement of acid strength[11]
Indicators
Color
pKaa
[H2SO4]b/%
Base-form
Acid-form
Neutral red
yellow
red
+ 6.8
8 × 10-8
Methyl red
yellow
red
+ 4.8
―
Phenylazonaphthylamine
yellow
red
+ 4.0
5 × 10-5
p-Dimethylaminoazobenzene
yellow
red
+ 3.3
3 × 10-4
2-Amino-5-azotoluene
yellow
red
+ 2.0
5 × 10-3
Benzeneazodiphenylamine
yellow
purple
+ 1.5
2 × 10-2
Crystal violet
blue
yellow
+ 0.8
0.1
p-Nitrobenzeneazo-
orange
purple
+ 0.43
―
Dicinnamalacetone
yellow
red
- 3.0
48
Benzalacetophenone
colorless
yellow
- 5.6
71
Anthraquinone
colorless
yellow
- 8.2
90
2,4,6-Trinitroaniline
colorless
yellow
- 10.10
98
p-Nitrotoluene
colorless
yellow
- 11.35
*c
m-Nitrotoluene
colorless
yellow
- 11.99
*
p-Nitrofluorobenzene
colorless
yellow
- 12.44
*
p-Nitrochlorobenzene
colorless
yellow
- 12.70
*
m-Nitrochlorobenzene
colorless
yellow
- 13.16
*
2,4-Dinitrotoluene
colorless
yellow
- 13.75
*
2,4-Dinitrofluorobenzne
colorless
yellow
- 14.52
*
1,3,5-Trinitrotoluene
colorless
yellow
- 16.04
*
(p’-nitro-diphenylamine)
a
b
c
pKa of the conjugate acid of indicator
wt. percentage of H2SO4 in sulfuric acid solution which has the acid strength
corresponding to the respective pKa
The indicator is liquid at room temperature: the acid strength corresponding to the
indicator is higher than the acid strength of 100 percent H2SO4
The acid strength of a solid superacid is very sensitive to moisture. Thus, to
determine the acid strength, the vapor of an indicator is adsorbed on a solid sample
through a breakable seal in a vacuum system at room temperature. The acid strength
is determined from the color change of the indicator.[12]
45
2.6.3 Determine the Number of Acid Sites by Amine Titration
The number of acid sites on a solid surface can be measured by amine titration
following determination of acid strength by the above method. This method is
performed by titrating a solid acid suspended in benzene with n-butylamine using a
selected indicator. The number of acid sites at various acid strengths can be
determined by amine titration using various indicators with different pKa values.
Both proton donors and electron pair acceptors on the surface will react with
either the electron pair of the indicator or that of the amine to form a coordination
bond. Thus, the amine titration method gives only the total amounts of both BrØnsted
and Lewis acid. This method is not suitable for colored or dark samples because it is
difficult to observe the usual color change. However, several other methods can be
applied for this case. By mixing the colored sample with a white substance of known
acidity, the number of acid sites of the colored sample is calculated by subtracting the
known acidity of the white substance from the total amount of acidity determined
from the titration results. The spectrophotometric method and calorimetric titration of
a solid acid with amine have also been used for the estimation of the acid amount of a
colored or dark sample.[13-15] Recently, Hashimoto et al.[16] developed a method to
measure the acid strength and distribution on a solid surface. By utilizing the
chemisorption isotherms of a series of Hammett indicators on a solid suspended in a
nonpolar solvent such as benzene or cyclohexane, the fraction of acid sites covered by
the indicator was found and expressed by a Langmuir type equation involving both
acid strength and the indicator concentration. A cumulative distribution curve of acid
strength can be derived from the chemisorption isotherms of Hammett indicators.
46
Samples were freshly dried at 100°C in test tubes before carrying out the
indicator tests, and were subjected to color tests immediately after drying. Removal of
adsorbed water is necessary as the effect of water adsorption changed the color
intensity of the adsorbed indicators or caused a shift to lower acid strengths. Color
tests were carried out by transferring a few milligram of dried, powdered solid to a
watch glass, and adding a few drops of 0.1% solution of indicator. From the results of
the tests, it was decided whether the solid was basic or acidic to all indicators, or had
an H0 value lying between two adjacent indicators’ pKa values.
The amount of acid sites on the samples was measured by amine titration
immediately after determination of acid strength by above method. The 0.04N
n-butylamine solution was prepared by dissolving 0.1 mL of n-butylamine in a 25 mL
volumetric flask and making up the volume using dried benzene. 0.05 g solid sample
was weighed and transferred to a 50 mL flask containing 5 mL benzene. Three drops
of the 0.1% methyl red solution was added to the sample suspension. The titration was
conducted using a burette with small steps.
2.7 Temperature Programmed Desorption of Ammonia
Gaseous bases adsorbed on acid sites give information about the acidity of the
solid surface. A base adsorbed on strong acid site is more stable and more difficult to
desorb than one adsorbed on a weak acid site. As temperature is increased, evacuation
of the adsorbed bases from acid sites occurs. Bases adsorbed at weaker acid sites will
be evacuated at lower temperature than those at stronger acid sites. Thus, the
evacuation temperatures indicate the strength of various acid sites.
47
The amount of a gaseous base adsorbed chemically by a solid is proportional
to the number of acid sites on the solid surface. Ammonia, n-butylamine, and pyridine
are gaseous bases commonly used for the determination of strength and amount of a
solid acid. The advantages of the gaseous base adsorption and desorption method are:
(1) It can be used to determine the amount of acid sites for a solid at high temperature
or under its actual working conditions. (2) It can also be applied even to colored
samples. However, the disadvantage is the BrØnsted and Lewis acid sites can not be
differentiated by this method.
Temperature
programmed
desorption
is
one
of
the
most
useful
characterization methods in the study of heterogeneous catalysts and was developed
in 1963 by Canadian researchers Amenomiya and Cvetanovic.[17] Compared with
other analytical techniques, TPD provides information which is closely related to the
catalytic properties and the reactions in real work. In a TPD measurement, a sample is
first heated in a vacuum or helium atmosphere to remove contamination. Then, a
gaseous base is introduced to be adsorbed by the sample. With a programmed
temperature rise, desorption of the adsorbed gas starts and the amount of gas desorbed
is continuously monitored by a mass analyzer. The gaseous bases adsorbed at acid
sites with different acid strength gain enough energy to escape at different
temperatures. The desorbed gas is carried by helium and detected by the mass
spectrometer. The temperature of the peak maximum provides information on the
binding energy of the bound species.
A home-built TPD system was used in this study. For pretreatment, the sample
was first heated at 500°C under the flow of helium for 2 h. After preheating, the
48
sample was cooled to room temperature before introducing ammonia. After flushing
with ammonia for 15 minutes, helium was passed over the sample for 2 h to flush
away any physically adsorbed ammonia at 150°C. The sample was then heated at a
constant heating rate of 10 °C/min and the ammonia desorbed over a temperature
range of 150°C to 500°C was measured. The amount of ammonia desorbed
corresponds to the number of acid sites on the surface. Calibration of the ammonia
signal was carried out by injecting 250 μL of ammonia into the system and measuring
the area of signal peak. A value of 3.61 × 10-8 As/mmol was obtained for
measurement conditions of pre-chamber pressure 5 mbar and high vacuum pressure of
5 × 10-7 mbar.
2.8 Catalytic Activity Test
2.8.1 Fischer Indole Synthsis of 2-ethyl-3-propyl indole and 2-butyl-3-methyl indole
The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine and 3-heptanone (Scheme 2.1)
was carried out in a two-necked 25 mL round-bottomed flask equipped with a
condenser. 0.202 mL (2 mmol) of phenylhydrazine (Aldrich, 97%) and 0.279 mL
(2 mmol) of 3-heptanone (Fluka) were mixed in 5 mL solvent, p-xylene (Fluka).
1 mmol dodecane was added as internal standard. The flask was flushed with nitrogen
and the reaction mixture was heated up to 140°C with stirring under nitrogen. After
30 minutes, the complete condensation of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone to form
phenylhydrazone was confirmed by gas chromatography (Fig. 2.3). Then 0.25 g of the
catalyst was introduced to catalyze the [3,3]-sigmatropic rearrangement followed by
intramolecular cyclisation. Aliquots were removed at regular time intervals and
analyzed by GC (Fig. 2.4).
49
H3CHC
C2H5
NH
C4H9
C2H5
O
C4H9
+
C4H9
NH
2
N
H
4
C4H9
N
NH
1
C2H5
NHNH2
CHC3H7
NH
NH
3
C3H7
N
H
5
C2H5
Scheme 2.1 Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone
Fig. 2.3 Gas chromatogram after formation of E/Z phenylhydrazone
It has long been known that phenylhydrazones, although more stable than the
aliphatic hydrazines, are quite sensitive to air oxidation, usually taking on a yellow to
red colouration due to partial or complete conversion to the appropriate azo
derivative.[18] In this study, the formation of phenylhydrazones and the synthesis of
indole products were protected by inert nitrogen gas. Oxidation occurred very fast
when phenylhydrazones were exposed to air at the high reaction temperature of
50
140°C, accompanied by an obviously yellow to red colour change. It is therefore
necessary to protect the synthesis from air and other oxidizing compounds. Also,
aliquots removed from the reaction vessel should be analyzed immediately using GC
to minimize the possible oxidation of phenylhydrazones.
Fig. 2.4 Gas chromatogram of reaction mixture of Fischer indole reaction of
phenylhydrazine with 3-heptaone
2.8.2 Analysis of Products by Gas Chromatography and GC-MS
Gas chromatography (GC) is a technique for separating and detecting volatile
substances.[19] This separation technique is basically done by percolating a mixture
gas substances over a stationary phase and depends upon the adsorptive properties of
the column packing. Nowadays, the capillary column is used mostly in gas
chromatography. It consists of long tube that can be made of metal, glass or quartz.
The outside of the tube is coated with a polymer resin to provide mechanical strength
and prevent atmospheric erosion. The external coating can remain stable up to about
250°C. The stationary phase is coated as a thin film on the internal surface of the tube.
51
The most important characteristic of the capillary column is its small flow impedance
relative to that of the packed column. This permits very short columns operated at
very high mobile phase velocities to provide fast separations. The column is the heart
of any chromatograph. When a mixture gas passes though the column, the individual
components in the mixture are separated from each other due to their different moving
speed, and finally detected as individual sample bands.[20] As the sample components
move through the column, they will dissolve in the stationery phase without any
movement. The mobile phase (carrier gas) flows continuously through the column to
elute the individual components of the sample. Components with a low solubility
move faster than components with a high solubility. Therefore, individual components
are separated. Nitrogen, helium, and hydrogen are the most common carrier gases.
The components in the sample will equilibrate between the moving gas phase and the
stationary liquid phase to form so-called theoretical plates.[19]
An Agilent GC 6890 equipped with a HP-5 capillary column and an FID
detector was used to analyze the samples. The temperature program used for
separation of the products was as follow:
Initial temperature: 80°C
Holding time: 2 min
Rate 1: 10 °C/min
Temperature 1: 230 °C
Rate 2: 20 °C/min
Temperature 2: 300 °C
The identity of the products was verified by comparison with the retention
time of authentic samples and by GC–MS (Shimadzu GCMS QP5000, DB5MS
column).
52
The conversion and selectivity of indole products are calculated by the
following equations:
%conversion =
([P1 ] + [P2 ]) / 12.15
([P1 ] + [P2 ]) / 12.15 + ([R 1 ] + [R 2 ]) / 11.4
× 100
(2.9)
%selectivity 1 =
[P1 ]
× 100
[P1 ] + [P2 ]
(2.10)
%selectivity 2 =
[P2 ]
× 100
[P1 ] + [P2 ]
(2.11)
where [P1], [P2] represent the peak areas from gas chromatogram for linear and bulky
indole products respectively; [R1], [R2] represent the peak areas for corresponding E/Z
phenylhydrazones; ECN for indole products is 12.15, and for phenylhydrazone
reactants is 11.4.
2.8.3 Fischer Indole Synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole
The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with cyclohexanone to
1,2,3,4-hydrocarbazole was carried out in a similar way using 2mmol cyclohexanone
instead of 3-heptanone (Fig. 2.5). Only a single hydrazone intermediate was formed,
and therefore 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole was the only product (Scheme 2.2).
53
NHNH2
+
O
N
H
N
N
H
8
Scheme 2.2 Fischer indole synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole
Fig. 2.5 Gas chromatogram of reaction mixture of Fischer indole synthesis of
1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole
54
References
[1]
B. D. Cullity, in Elements of X-ray diffraction (Ed. B.D. Cullity) 1956
(Addison-Wesley Pub. Co.)
[2]
M. K. Ismail, Langmuir 1992, 8, 360
[3]
S. J. Gregg, K. S. W. Sing, in Asdorption, Surface Area and Porosity (Eds. S.
J. Gregg, K. S. W. Sing) 1967 (Academic Press: London, New York)
[4]
A. J. Lecloux, in Catalysis, Science and Technology (Eds. J. R. Aderson, M.
Boudart) 1984, vol. 5 (Springer-Verlag: Berlin, Heidelber, New York)
[5]
J. B. Peri, J. Phys. Chem. 1965, 69, 211
[6]
P. Fink, J. Datka, J. Chem. Soc. Faraday Trans. 1 1989, 85, 309
[7]
E. P. Parry, J. Cata. 1963, 2, 371
[8]
S. J. Hill, in Inductively Coupled Plasma Spectrometry and its Applications,
second edition (Ed. S. J. Hill) 2007 (Blackwell Pub.)
[9]
P. Gabbott, in Principles and Applications of Thermal Analysis (Ed. P.
Gabbott) 2008 (Blackwell Pub.)
[10]
L. P. Hammett, A. J. Deyrup, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1932, 54, 2721
[11]
K. Tanabe, in Catalysis: Science and Technology (Eds. J. R. Anderson, M.
Boudart) 1981, vol. 2 (Springer-Verlag: Berlin, Heidelber, New York)
[12]
K. Tanabe, H. Hattori, Chem. Lett. 1976, 625
[13]
L. Forni, Advan. Catal. 1974, 8, 65
[14]
K. Tanabe, T. Yamaguchi, J. Res. Inst. Catal. 1966, 14, 93
[15]
S. P. Walvekar, A. B. Halgeri, S. Ramanna, T. N. Srinivasan, Fertilizer Tech.
1976, 13, 241
[16]
K. Hashimoto, T. Masuda, H. Motoyama, H. Yakushiji, M. Ono, I & EC Prod.
Res. & Develop. 1986, 25, 243
55
[17]
Y. Amernomiya, R. J. Cventanovic, J. Phys. Chem. 1963, 63, 144
[18]
S. Patai; in The chemistry of the hydrazo, azo and azoxy groups (Ed. S. Patai)
1975 (Wiley: New York)
[19]
H. M. McNair, in Basic Gas Chromatography (Ed. H. M. McNair) 1988
(American Chemical Society: Washington, D. C.)
[20]
R. P. W. Scott, in Introduction to Analytical Gas Chromatography, Second
Edition, Revised and Expanded (Ed. R. P. W. Scott) 1998 (Marcel Dekker,
Inc.)
56
Chapter Ш
Study of Hydrous Zirconia Supported Niobium Oxide Catalysts
3.1 Introduction
Niobium materials have been receiving increasing interest in heterogeneous
catalysis where they play a role as catalyst components or promoter species. Many
niobium containing compounds have been studied for different purposes.
Niobium oxides go through three steps of phase transitions on heating,
changing from amorphous to crystalline T form at ca. 773 K, T to M form at ca.
1103 K, and M to H form at around 1473 K.[1,2] In between these temperatures, some
other phases, for example, less crystalline TT form can be found as well.[3] Niobium
oxide-based compounds generally comprise of
octahedrally coordinated NbO6
structure. Based on whether the structure is corner- or edge-shared, the octahedral
NbO6 is distorted to different extents.[4] The highly distorted NbO6 structure contains
Nb=O bonds which are responsible for Lewis acid sites.[5] In contrast, the slightly
distorted NbO6 structure together with the NbO7 and NbO8 groups only possess Nb-O
bonds and are responsible for Brønsted acid sites. Lewis acid sites are present in all
supported niobium oxide systems, but only in the Nb2O5/Al2O3 and Nb2O5/SiO2
systems, Brønsted acid sites are generated.[6] Hydrated niobium pentoxide
(Nb2O5·nH2O), also known as niobic acid, has a high acid strength with H0 ≤ -5.6.[7]
The acidity decreases when heated above 300°C and becomes almost neutral after
calcination at 500°C. The presence of water is essential for the acidity in niobium
oxide, making it a useful catalyst in reactions where there is water participation or
liberation.[8]
57
On phosphating niobium oxide with H3PO4, niobium phosphate is formed.[9]
Commercial amorphous niobium phosphate shows strong surface acidity that is
retained at temperatures higher than that for niobium oxide. Like niobium oxide,
niobium phosphate also promotes some acid-catalyzed reactions.[10] Thus, the acidic
and catalytic properties of niobium phosphate are similar to that of niobium oxide, but
the advantage is these properties are conserved at higher pretreatment temperatures.[11]
Various functions of niobium-containing compounds are applied in
heterogeneous catalysis. As a promoter or active phase, a small amount of niobia
added enhance the catalytic activity and the selectivity of the known catalysts and
prolong catalyst life.[10,12] Three factors have been found to affect the surface
properties of supported niobia catalysts. Firstly, a study of support materials, selected
from silica, alumina, magnesia, titania, zirconia, and zeolites showed that Lewis
acidity is found in all of the supported niobium oxide systems, while Brønsted acid
sites are only detected in niobia supported on alumina and silica. The choice of
niobium precursors is another crucial factor. Potential niobium precursors include
niobium chloride, niobium oxalate, niobium ethoxide, niobium acid, niobates, and
niobium complexes with hydrocarbon ligands. The niobium oxide species are usually
deposited at the outer surface of the catalysts as an overlayer. The formation and
location of these surface niobium oxide species depend on the surface hydroxyl
properties of the catalysts. Preparation methods affect the promotion effect of surface
niobium oxide species as well. A simple impregnation method helps in a uniform
dispersion of niobium oxides on the supports.
58
Niobium oxide has also been used as an oxide support for metals such as Ru,
Rh, Pt, Re, Ni, Cr, W, Co, V, P, Ge, Mo, Sb, Pb, Bi and Fe. It exhibits a pronounced
effect when used in this manner.[10,12] The properties of the niobia are promoted by the
surface interaction with other metals, while its high selectivity is still maintained. For
example, Jehng et al.[13] studied the properties of various surface modified niobium
oxide catalysts. Metal oxides (Re2O7, CrO3, WO3, MoO3, and V2O5) were loaded on
the niobium oxide surface by the incipient-wetness impregnation method. Acidity and
BET studies revealed that the presence of the surface metal oxide species retained the
surface acidic properties and surface area of niobium oxide during high calcination
temperature (500 °C). At low metal oxide loadings (less than 10 wt.% ), the surface
areas of the resultant supported metal oxide catalysts has the following order:
V2O5/Nb2O5 > CrO3/Nb2O5 > WO3/Nb2O5 > MoO3/Nb2O5 > ReO3/Nb2O5 > Nb2O5.
For 1% V2O5/Nb2O5, the surface area was very large, ca. 100 m2/g. Also, the acidity
of 1% V2O5/Nb2O5 was similar to that of hydrous niobium oxide. Acidic properties of
surface modified niobium oxide catalysts studied by pyridine absorption infrared
spectroscopy were shown in Table 3.1. In the catalysis studies of methanol oxidation,
1% WO3/Nb2O5 exhibited selectivity towards CH3OCH3 similar to that of pure
niobium oxide, but the catalytic activity of 1% WO3/Nb2O5 was doubled.
Niobium compounds are also used directly as solid acid catalysts. A typical
example is niobic acid. As previously stated, niobic acid has strong acid strength
corresponding to 70% sulfuric acid. The existence of water molecular in the catalyst
provides both BrØnsted and Lewis acid sites. Therefore, it can be used in many acidcatalyzed reactions such as dehydration, esterification, and hydrolysis where water
molecules involve.[14-18]
59
Table 3.1 Acidic properties of surface modified niobium oxide catalystsa
Amount of LASb
Amount of BASb
(μmol/g)
(μmol/g)
Niobium oxide (act. 200°C)
152
57
Niobium oxide (cal. 500°C)
0
0
1% Re2O7/ Nb2O5
24
8
1% CrO3/ Nb2O5
39
5
1% WO3/ Nb2O5
56
26
1% MoO3/ Nb2O5
12
0
1% V2O5/ Nb2O5
106
46
Catalyst
a
b
all surface modified niobium oxide catalysts were calcined at 500°C
LAS: Lewis acid site; BAS: BrØnsted acid site
In this work, we explore the use of supported niobium oxide as possible catalyst in
the Fischer indole synthesis. The molecular structures and reactivity of twodimensional niobium oxide overlayers on zirconia have been well investigated.[19-21]
Surface hydroxyl groups play an important role in the loading and alumina, titania and
zirconia tend to form a close-packed monolayer of surface niobium oxide. In contrast,
the lower surface hydroxyl density on silica does not allow the formation of a closepacked monolayer. Hence, use of hydrous zirconia and silica as supports allows a
comparison of the activity of the supported niobium oxide.
3.2 Preparation of Catalysts
3.2.1 Preparation of Hydrous Zirconia Support
20 g of ZrCl4 powder (Merck) was dissolved in 200 mL deionized water to
make a 10% zirconium chloride solution. The acidic zirconium chloride solution was
transferred via a peristaltic pump into excess 5 M ammonium hydroxide solution
60
under vigorous stirring using a mechanic stirrer. The pH of the mixture was adjusted
to 9.5 using 5 M ammonium hydroxide. The gel solution was then transferred into a
400 mL Teflon round bottom flask and digested for 24 h at 100°C. The solid product
was collected by filtering, washed with dilute ammonia nitrate solution until free of
chloride, rinsed with deionized water and dried at 100°C overnight.
3.2.2 Wet Impregnation of Niobium Oxide on Hydrous Zirconia Support
To synthesize 2 g of 10 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4, 0.41 g of NbCl5 (Riedel-deHaen) was weighed and dissolved in 10 mL of ethanol. A solvolysis reaction occurs
when NbCl5 and an alcohol are mixed together leading to the formation of a
trichloroalkoxide.[22,23]
NbCl5 + ROH(excess) Æ NbCl2 (OR)3 + 3HC1
About 1.8 g of hydrous zirconia support was added to the clear niobium chloride
solution and the mixture was stirred. In order to precipitate the niobium oxide, 5 M
ammonium hydroxide solution was added dropwise to the solution. The completion of
precipitation was attained when no more gaseous ammonium chloride was evolved.
Finally, the pH of the gel solution was adjusted to 10 using 5 M ammonium hydroxide.
The gel solution was transferred into a 150 mL Teflon round bottom flask and
digested for 24 h at 100°C. The product was filtered, washed and dried as for hydrous
zirconia. Samples with various loadings of niobium oxide (20 wt.%, 25 wt.%,
30 wt.%, 40 wt.%) were synthesized in a similar manner (Table 3.2). To investigate
the effect of drying temperature on the textural properties and catalytic activities of
61
the catalysts, all samples were dried at three different temperatures, 100°C, 200°C and
300°C.
Table 3.2 Amount of reagents used in preparing the Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts
NbCl5 (g)
Sample Name
Zr(OH)4 (g)
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
1.8
0.41
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
1.6
0.81
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
1.5
1.02
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
1.4
1.22
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
1.2
1.63
3.2.3 Synthesis of 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 by Coprecipitation Method
To prepare 2 g of catalyst, 1.02 g of NbCl5 (Riedel-de-Haen) and 2.84 g of
ZrCl4 (Merck) were first dissolved in 10 mL of ethanol and 30 mL of deionized water
separately. The two precursor solutions were then mixed to form an acidic mixture
solution with pH ≈ 1. Then 5 M ammonium hydroxide solution was used to
precipitate the zirconium and niobium cations in a similar way as described
previously for the preparation of hydrous zirconia. The final pH was adjusted to 10
using 5 M ammonium hydroxide. The gel solution was transferred into a 150 mL
Teflon round bottom flask and digested for 24 h at 100°C. The product was filtered,
washed and dried as for hydrous zirconia.
3.2.4 Synthesis of 25 wt.% Nb2O5/MCM-41 by Wet Impregnation
To compare the effect of the support, 25 wt.% Nb2O5/MCM-41 was
synthesized following the procedure above. The mesoporous material MCM-41 was
synthesized following the method by Cheng et al.[24]
62
TEAOH and CTABr were added to deionized water with stirring at 30°C until
the solution became clear. Fumed silica was added and the solution was stirred for 2 h
before allowing the gel to age for 24 h at room temperature. The molar composition of
final gel mixture was 1.0 SiO2: 0.19 TEAOH: 0.27 CTABr: 40 H2O. The mixture was
reacted for 48 h at 150°C in a Teflon-lined stainless-steel autoclave. The solid product
was filtered, washed with deionized water, dried in air at 100°C overnight and finally
calcined at 550°C for 8 h.
3.2.5 Recycling of Catalysts
Three methods were used to regenerate the used 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
catalyst.
Method 1: After the reaction, the catalyst was collected by centrifugation,
washed with the solvent p-xylene for several times, and then dried in a 100°C oven
overnight.
Method 2: The catalyst was first washed with solvent, dried, and then
immersed in 30% H2O2 solution with vigorously stirring. The color of the catalyst
finally changed to pale yellow and the catalyst was again collected by centrifugation
of the suspension. The dried catalyst was suspended in 50 mL of 5 M ammonia
solution in a Teflon round bottom flask and digested for 24 h to regenerate the
hydroxyl groups. After rehydration, the catalyst was filtered, washed with deionized
water and dried before use.
Method 3: As in method 2, the catalyst was washed with solvent and dried
before immersion in 30% H2O2 solution. The mixture solution was stirred and heated
63
up to 40°C. The catalyst recovered its white color after a few hours and it was filtered
and dried overnight.
3.3 Catalyst Characterization
3.3.1 Powder X-ray Diffraction
Fig. 3.1 shows the X-ray diffractograms of the hydrous zirconia support and
the Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts after drying at 100°C, 200°C and 300°C. The hydrous
zirconia support was X-ray amorphous after drying at 300°C. This result is expected
as the reported transformation from the amorphous hydrous zirconia to crystalline
zirconium oxide usually occurs after calcination above 450°C.[25] None of the
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples show any observable diffraction peak indicating the lack of
crystallinity in the niobium oxide overlayer. This may be due to the fact that the
transition of the amorphous niobium oxide to the crystalline γ-form occurs only at
435°C.[4]
The X-ray diffractogram of the MCM-41 support shows one intense peak at 2θ
~ 1.9°, as well as four weaker peaks at 3.3°, 3.8°, 5.1° and 5.8° (Fig. 3.2). These
reflexes correspond to the diffraction planes (100), (110), (200), (210) and (300)
respectively. The presence of these reflexes indicates that the MCM-41 formed has a
very well-ordered hexagonal structure.[24] However, after impregnation with 25 wt.%
niobium oxide, all the diffraction peaks could no longer be seen. The overall peak
intensity is also decreased, which may be partly due to (i) a decrease in the diffraction
contrast of the lattice when the pores are filled with niobium oxide, as well as (ii) a
destruction of the well-structured pores as a result of impregnation.
64
Intensity (cps)
1600
1400
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
Coppt
1200
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
1000
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
800
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
600
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
400
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
Zirconia support
200
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2θ (°)
(a)
1400
Intensity (cps)
1200
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
1000
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
800
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
600
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
400
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
Zirconia support
200
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2θ (°)
(b)
1400
Intensity (cps)
1200
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
1000
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
800
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
600
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
400
Zirconia support
200
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2θ (°)
(c)
Fig. 3.1 X-ray diffractograms of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts
after drying at (a) 100°C (b) 200°C (c) 300°C
65
8000
100
7000
Intensity (cps)
6000
5000
4000
110
200
3000
210
2000
25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
300
1000
MCM-41 support
0
1.6
3.6
5.6
7.6
9.6
2θ (°)
Fig. 3.2 X-ray diffractograms of MCM-41 and 25 wt.% Nb2O5/MCM-41
3.3.2 Textural Properties
The hydrous zirconia dried at 100°C had the highest surface area of 377 m2/g
(Table 3.3), but the surface area of niobium oxide was measured to be only 4.58 m2/g.
After impregnation with niobium oxide, the surface area of the catalysts decreased to
171 - 314 m2/g. This is mostly likely caused by a reduction in the porosity of the
hydrous zirconia support. When the drying temperature was increased to 200°C and
300°C, the surface area further decreased to 155 - 212 m2/g. The retention of the
surface area despite the higher temperature suggests that the hydrous amorphous
nature of the catalysts is still present. In comparison, a 25 wt.% Nb2O5-Zr(OH)4
sample prepared by coprecipitation method had a lower surface area, 163 m2/g, than
that prepared by impregnation, 201 m2/g. The nature of the support also plays a role
as supporting niobium oxide onto the mesoporous siliceous material MCM-41 results
a drastic decrease of surface area. The surface area of the MCM-41 support dropped
from 1009 m2/g to only 240 m2/g in 25 wt.% Nb2O5/MCM-41.
66
From nitrogen porosimetry, all the Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts were found to
have a wide range of pores ranging from 2.9 - 10 nm, with a bimodal distribution of
pores centred around 3.3 nm and 5.6 nm (Fig. 3.3). Hydrous zirconia dried at 100°C
had the largest pore volume, 0.47 cm3/g. After impregnation with niobium oxide, the
pore volume decreased and the pore size distribution became narrower as shown in
Fig. 3.5a. This suggests that the niobium oxide is uniformly deposited on the surface
of hydrous zirconia support with little pore blockage. The 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
sample was prepared following activity studies, and a different batch of hydrous
zirconia was used as support. As with the other samples, the pore size distribution of
the supported sample is similar to that of the support, suggesting an even distribution
of niobium oxide on the surface of hydrous zirconia.
In contrast, for the MCM-41 supported samples, the mesopores centred around
2.9 nm in MCM-41 no longer existed after impregnation with niobium oxide
indicating the blockage of the pores by the promoter (Fig. 3.5b). Instead, the
remaining pores are shifted to bigger pore diameters, centred at ~ 3.5 nm. These
results show that the sizes of niobium oxide clusters are at least 2.9 nm in diameter so
that the bulk of the mesopores in MCM-41is no longer accessible.
The loadings of niobium oxide in the catalysts were determined by inductively
coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES). The results show that the
actual niobium oxide loadings were slightly higher than the expected value for all
samples (Table 3.4). For the MCM-41 supported sample, the actual and expected
niobium oxide contents were very close, about 25%. Based on the crystalline structure
of Nb2O5, the cross-sectional area of a Nb2O5 unit[21] is estimated to be
67
Table 3.3 Textural properties of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts
Sample
Drying
SBET
(m2/g)
Temperature
(°C)
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
Pore volume
(cm3/g)
100
314
0.41
200
245
0.33
300
212
0.33
100
252
0.33
200
246
0.32
300
211
0.30
100
201
0.20
200
199
0.20
300
153
0.19
100
217
0.28
200
227
0.30
300
180
0.27
100
171
0.22
200
180
0.24
300
155
0.22
100
377
0.47
200
268
0.35
300
227
0.34
Nb2O5
―
4.58
0.01
25% Nb2O5-Zr(OH)4
coppt
100
163
0.12
25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
100
240
0.69
MCM-41
500
1009
0.68
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
Zr(OH)4 support
68
0.32 nm2. Using this value, the theoretical monolayer coverage of the supported
samples can be calculated as follows (equations 3.1 – 3.3).
Calculation of theoretical monolayer coverage
n(Nb2O5) =
actual Nb2O5 content
molecular weight of Nb2O5
(3.1)
where n(Nb2O5) = number of moles of Nb2O5 in catalyst
S(Nb2O5) = n(Nb2O5) × NA × 0.32 nm2
(3.2)
where S(Nb2O5) = total surface area of Nb2O5 overlayer
Monolayer coverage =
S(Nb2O5)
SBET of catalyst
(3.3)
The overlayer coverage of 10 to 40 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts was
calculated to be between 0.22 to 2.0, where at 25% to 30% loadings, the overlayer of
niobium oxide approached a monolayer. Jehng and Wachs[19,20] measured the surface
coverage and surface density of niobium oxide overlayers on different oxide supports
and found that supports such as Al2O3, TiO2, and ZrO2 with a high density of reactive
surface hydroxyls could form a close-packed niobium oxide monolayer. In contrast,
SiO2 support had a lower density of reactive surface hydroxyls and thus the surface
density of niobium oxide formed was only ~ 1/20 compared with that of ZrO2
supported catalyst. Therefore, they concluded that a necessary condition for the
formation of surface metal oxide overlayers is the presence of reactive surface
hydroxyls on the oxide support. However, in this study the niobium oxide overlayer
on the surface of MCM-41 support was formed using deposition impregnation method
69
which did not rely on the number of reactive surface hydroxyl groups. Therefore, the
monolayer coverage in the 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41 was found to be 0.74. This value
was much higher than that reported by Jehng and Wachs.
Table 3.4 Niobium oxide loading and surface coverage
Sample
Drying
Nb2O5
contenta
temperature
(wt.%)
(°C)
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
a
b
100
11.7
Monolayerb
0.33
200
0.32
300
0.40
100
25.5
0.73
200
0.75
300
0.88
100
27.4
0.90
200
0.91
300
1.09
100
31.4
1.05
200
1.01
300
1.26
100
47.1
2.00
200
1.90
300
2.20
100
24.6
0.74
from ICP-AES measurement
based on 0.32 nm2/Nb2O5
70
400
0.09
100
200
350
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm /g)
300
300
3
Volume adsorbed/desorbed(cm3/g)
100
200
300
0.08
250
200
150
100
50
0.07
0.06
0.05
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
0.8
0
1
2
4
6
8
Average pore diameter (nm)
10
(a) hydrous zirconia
350
0.08
100
200
100
200
300
0.07
300
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm3/g)
Volume adsorbed/desorbed(cm3/g)
300
250
200
150
100
50
0.06
0.05
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
0.8
0
1
2
4
6
8
Average pore diameter (nm)
10
(b) 10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
300
0.06
100
100
200
300
200
300
0.05
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm3/g)
Volume adsorbed/desorbed(cm3/g)
250
200
150
100
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01
50
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Relative Pressure (P/P 0)
0.8
1
0
2
4
6
8
Average pore diameter (nm)
10
(c) 20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
71
250
0.06
100
100
200
300
200
300
0.05
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm3/g)
Volume adsorbed/desorbed(cm3/g)
200
150
100
50
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
0.8
0
1
2
4
6
8
Average pore diameter (nm)
10
(d) 30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
200
0.045
100
200
300
150
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm3/g)
Volume adsorbed/desorbed(cm3/g)
100
200
300
0.04
100
50
0.035
0.03
0.025
0.02
0.015
0.01
0.005
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
0.8
0
1
2
4
6
8
Average pore diameter (nm)
10
(e) 40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
0.09
200
100
200
300
100
0.08
200
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm3/g)
Volume adsorbed/desorbed(cm3/g)
300
150
100
50
0.07
0.06
0.05
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
0.8
1
0
2
4
6
8
Average pore diameter (nm)
10
(f) 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
Fig. 3.3 Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves and pore volume distributions of
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts (a) – (f)
72
500
2
450
1.5
400
1
MCM-41
350
Pore volume (cm3/g)
volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm
3
/g)
2.9
MCM-41
300
250
200
150
0.5
0
0
5
10
15
20
(b)
0.06
25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
0.04
100
25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
50
0.02
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
0
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
0
5
(a)
Average10diameter(nm)
15
20
(c)
Fig. 3.4 (a) Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves; pore volume distribution of (b)
MCM-41 and (c) 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
0.09
2
0.08
1.5
p o re v o lu m e (c m 3 /g )
pore volum e(cm 3/g)
0.07
0.06
Zr(OH)4
0.05
10%
0.04
20%
30%
0.03
1
0.5
40%
0.02
0.01
0
0
0
1
2
pore diameter(nm)
4 5 6 7 8
pore diameter(nm)
(a)
(b)
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1
2
3
9 10
Fig. 3.5 Comparison of pore volume distribution (a) hydrous zirconia supported
niobium oxide catalyst with Nb2O5 loadings from 0 – 40 wt.%, drying temperature
100°C (b) MCM-41 and 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
73
3.3.3 Thermogravimetric Analysis
Thermogravimetric analysis (Fig. 3.6) show that hydrous zirconia lost weight
in a number of steps. Prior to the measurement, all samples were kept at 100°C for 30
min in order to remove physically adsorbed water. According to the IR investigations
of Orio et al.[26,27] coordinated water can be detected on a zirconia oxide surface up to
200°C. Therefore, the first weight loss from 100°C to 200°C can be assigned as
coordinated water (strongly bound chemisorbed water). Beyond this temperature,
subsequence loss of water was ascribed to removal of surface hydroxyl groups to
form zirconium oxide.[28] The total amount of water loss (Table 3.5 and 3.6) was
calculated in the form of ratio H2O/oxides (mol/mol) as follows (equations 3.4 – 3.8).
Calculation for amount of water lost H2O/oxides (mol/mol)
Weight of oxides (mg)
= total weight of sample (mg) × percentage weight 2 (%)
(3.4)
where percentage weight 2 (%) is the final weight percentage of sample after running
TGA program
Moles of oxides (mmol) =
weight of oxides (mg)
M (g/mol)
(3.5)
where M is the molecular weight of oxides,
e.g. Molecular weight of 10% Nb2O5/ZrO2a
= 0.1 × molecular weight of Nb2O5 + 0.9 × molecular weight of ZrO2
a
catalyst after running TGA program is in oxide form Nb2O5/ZrO2
Weight of water lost (mg)
= total weight of sample (mg) × percentage H2O (%)
(3.6)
74
where percentage H2O (%) is the weight percentage of water lost
Moles of H2O lost (mmol) =
H2O/oxides (mol/mol) =
weight of water (mg)
molecular weight of H2O (18 g/mol)
(3.7)
Moles of H2O lost (mmol)
Moles of oxides (mmol)
(3.8)
The amount of water lost for hydrous zirconia was 2.53 H2O/ZrO2 (mol/mol).
The weight loss for bulk niobium oxide occurred below 400°C, and no further change
in weight was observed for higher temperatures. The amount of water lost,
1.27 H2O/Nb2O5 (mol/mol), was smaller than that for hydrous zirconia. The weight
loss patterns of the Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples were similar to that for hydrous zirconia
where constant weight was observed only after 500°C. However, the amount of water
lost was comparable to that of bulk niobium oxide, 0.98 – 1.29 H2O/oxides (mol/mol).
The smaller amount of water lost as compared to the support suggests that the
niobium oxide overlayer stabilized the hydrated state of the hydrous zirconia support.
100
Nb2O5
90
weight (%)
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
80
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
70
Zr(OH)4
60
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
temperature(°C)
Fig. 3.6 TGA curves of hydrous zirconia , niobium oxide and
10 – 40 wt.% hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalysts
75
Table 3.5 Total amount of water lost (%) in TGA for Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts
Sample
Sample
Percentage Percentage Percentage
weight
weight 1a
weight 2b
H2Oc (%)
(mg)
(%)
(%)
Nb2O5
8.59
94.03
86.58
7.45
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
18.70
89.27
79.15
10.12
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
10.68
88.49
76.83
11.66
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
25.41
92.69
80.88
11.81
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
17.70
90.87
80.95
9.92
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
24.94
88.86
78.88
9.98
Zr(OH)4
27.05
93.96
68.62
25.34
a
initial weight percentage of sample after isotherm at 100 °C for 30 min
final weight percentage of sample after running TGA program
c
amount of water lost (%), equal to weight 1 (%) minus weight 2 (%)
b
Table 3.6 Calculation for amount of water lost H2O/oxides (mol/mol) for
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts
Sample
Weight of Moles of Weight of Moles of H2O/oxides
(mol/mol)
oxides
oxides
H2O lost
H2O lost
(mg)
(mmol)
(mg)
(mmol)
Nb2O5
7.44
0.03
0.64
0.04
1.27
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
14.80
0.11
1.89
0.11
0.98
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
8.21
0.05
1.25
0.07
1.28
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
20.55
0.13
3.00
0.17
1.29
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
14.33
0.09
1.76
0.10
1.13
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
19.68
0.11
2.49
0.14
1.27
Zr(OH)4
18.56
0.15
6.86
0.38
2.53
76
3.3.4 Acidity Test
Hammett indicators were used to determine the acid strength of the solid acid
catalysts (Table 3.7). The bulk niobium oxide showed only weak acid sites (pKa =
+3.3) at the surface. In contrast, the acid strength of the hydrous zirconia support was
much stronger (pKa = -3.0), which was equivalent to 48 wt.% sulfuric acid solution.
This can be attributed to the presence of surface hydroxyl groups on hydrous zirconia.
Also, it is known that the digestion step in sample preparation procedure can help to
increase the acidity of the catalysts through formation of BrØnsted acid sites and
increase of Lewis acid sites.[29,30] This may explain the strong acidity of 25 wt.%
Nb2O5-Zr(OH)4 sample prepared by coprecipitation method. On the other hand, after
10 wt.% niobium oxide was impregnated onto the hydrous zirconia, the acidity of the
resulting sample dropped drastically. From Table 3.8, it was found that the density of
acid sites decreased from 0.611 mmol/g in hydrous zirconia to 0.038 mmol/g in
10 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4. Similar observations had been found where the addition of
low loadings of niobium oxide onto titania and zirconia slightly decreased the number
of Lewis acid sites and also the strength of these sites.[19,20] However, as the Nb2O5
loadings increased, the acidity of the corresponding impregnated catalysts increased
as well. The acid strength of 20 to 25 wt.% niobium oxide impregnated sample was
comparable to that of the bulk niobium oxide (pKa = +3.3). At even higher niobium
oxide loading 30 to 40 wt.%, stronger acidity (pKa = -3.0) was exhibited. Onfroy et
al.[31] reported that a threshold of niobium oxide loading was necessary for the
formation of BrØnsted acid sites. Only when niobium oxide loading was higher than
1.2 Nb atoms/nm2, was BrØnsted acid sites formed. The number of BrØnsted acid sites
increased with increasing niobium loadings. Raman and infrared results showed that
at low loadings, monooxoniobate species were formed at the surface but at higher
77
loadings, dimeric and polymeric niobate species were formed. The density of acidic
sites with pKa of at least +4.8 was determined by titration with n-butyalmine. It was
found that the density of acidic sites increased with the niobium oxide loading. The
acid sites per unit area are calculated as follows (equation 3.9):
Acid site (m-2) =
Acid site (mol/g) × NA
SBET
(3.9)
where NA is the Avogadro constant, 6.023 × 1023, and
SBET is the surface area of the catalysts
The initial decrease in acid sites with the 10 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 sample
suggests that the NH4OH used to precipitate the niobium oxide can also react with the
acidic hydroxyl groups on hydrous zirconia. The consumption of these hydroxyl
groups reduces the overall acidity of the sample. As the loading of niobium oxide
increased, more hydroxyl groups on the support are utilized for anchoring these
species through formation of new Nb-OH-Zr bridging hydroxyls.[32] However, the loss
of these hydroxyl groups can be compensated by the acidic hydroxyl groups of
niobium oxide, thus increasing the acid density and strength of the sample.
Pyridine infrared spectroscopy was measured on 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 (Fig. 3.7).
Both Lewis as well as Brønsted acid sites were found.[33] The band at ~1442 cm-1,
indicative of H-bonded and Lewis-acid bonded pyridine, remained even after the
sample was heated to 200°C. However, the absorption band due to Brønsted acidity at
1540 cm-1 was only observed up to 100°C. This can be attributed to removal of
[H(H2O)n]+ species at the higher temperatures.
78
Table 3.7 Acid strength of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts measured using Hammett indicators
Sample
pKa
a
Methyl red
Methyl yellow
2-aminoazotoluene
4-phenyldiphenylamine
Dicinnamalacetone
Benzalacetophenone
+4.8
+3.3
+2.0
+1.5
-3.0
-5.6
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
+a
-
-
-
-
-
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
+
+a
-
-
-
-
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
+
+a
-
-
-
-
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
+
+
+a
+a
+a
-
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
+
+
+
+
+
-
Zr(OH)4
+
+
+
+
+
-
Nb2O5
+
+a
-
-
-
-
25% Nb2O5-Zr(OH)4 coppt
+
+
+
+
+
-
25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
+
+
+
+
+
-
slightly color change
79
Table 3.8 Measuring number of acid sites by n-butylamine titrationa
Sample
Acid sites
/m2
Zr(OH)4
0.611
9.76 x 1017
Nb2O5
0.260
9.91 x 1017
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
0.038
6.29 x 1016
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
0.226
5.40 x 1017
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
0.244
7.35 x 1017
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
0.282
7.83 x 1017
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
0.394
1.39 x 1018
25% Nb2O5-Zr(OH)4 coppt
0.495
1.24 x 1018
25% Nb2O5/MCM-41
1.035
3.82 x 1018
indicator used: methyl red (pKa = +4.8)
0.5
(c)
0.4
(b)
0.3
0.2
(a)
1700
absorbance
a
mmol/g
0.1
1650
1600
1550
1500
1450
0
1400
wavenumber(cm-1)
Fig. 3.7 Pyridine IR of 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 after
evacuation at (a) 25°C (b) 100°C and (c) 200°C.
80
3.4 Catalytic Activity
3.4.1 Effect of Niobium Oxide Loadings
The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone to 2-butyl-3methyl indole and 2-ethyl-3-propyl indole was tested (Fig. 3.8). Over bulk niobium
oxide, a conversion of only 32.6% was reached after 8 h reaction. The activity of the
hydrous zirconia support was higher than niobium oxide, and a conversion of 58.6%
was obtained in a similar reaction time. The increased activity of the hydrous zirconia
should be due to the presence of surface hydroxyl groups which promote the surface
acidity. When 10 wt.% niobium oxide was deposited on the hydrous zirconia, no
significant change in conversion was observed. However, at higher loading range 20
to 30 wt.%, the catalysts were much more active. A maximum conversion of 91.1%
was achieved for 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 sample on which the niobium oxide
coverage was close to a monolayer. Further increase of the loading to 40 wt.%
niobium oxide resulted in a lower conversion of only 68%.
It is known that when two or more metal oxides are mixed together, materials
with new acidic properties different from the original acid sites may be formed.
Seiyama[34] proposed that acidity appears at the boundary where two oxides contact.
The chemical environment of each of the cations does not change, but the the oxide
anion at the boundary coordinate to two different cations. This model is usually
applied in the case where an oxide is dispersed on a support. It is likely that the
formation of Nb-OH-Zr bridging hydroxyl groups has significant impact to the
activity of the catalysts in the Fischer indole reaction. As the niobium oxide loading
increased from 10 to 25 wt.%, the niobium oxide overlayer gradually reached a
monolayer, and the catalytic activity increased to a maximum.
81
100
90
80
conversion (%)
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
tim e(h)
Fig. 3.8 The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone over
(+) niobium oxide, (■) hydrous zirconia, and (×) 10% (□) 20% (▲) 25% (♦)
30% (○) 40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
100.00
90.00
80.00
conversion (%)
70.00
60.00
50.00
40.00
30.00
20.00
10.00
0.00
0
2
4
6
reaction time (h)
8
10
Fig. 3.9 The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone over
(■) 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 coppt (×) H-beta (Si/Al =12.5) (▲) 25%
Nb2O5/MCM-41 (♦) 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
82
Further increase of niobium oxide loading led to a decrease in indole conversion
because when the overlayer of niobium oxide exceeded a monolayer, bulk niobium
oxide was formed on the surface of catalysts which blocked the active sites and hence
reduced the activity. Similar observations were reported in V2O5/ZrO2 catalysts[35] and
zirconia supported heteropoly acids.[36]
A sample prepared by coprecipitation of hydrous zirconia and niobium oxide
with 25 wt.% niobium oxide loading was less active than 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 as the
conversion after 6 h was only 64% (Fig. 3.9). This is despite a higher density of acid
sites for the coprecipitated sample (0.495 g/mmol). The results suggest that an
overlayer of niobium oxide facilitated the catalytic reaction, rather than dispersed
niobium sites, although using both preparation methods new acid sites could be
created.[37] Indeed, the MCM-41 supported sample with 25 wt.% niobium oxide also
showed better activity, 83% conversion, than the coprecipitated sample. The niobium
oxide surface coverage on the MCM-41 sample was 0.74 monolayer. For comparison,
microporous H-beta (Si/Al = 12.5) was tested and found to be less active than the
supported niobium oxide samples. The conversion after 6 h was 72% for H-beta.
In the Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone, the
selectivity to 2-butyl-3-methyl-indole (linear product) and 2-ethyl-3-propyl-indole
(bulky product) was ca. 60:40 over all Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples (Table. 3.9). Besides
indoles, no other products were detected. Fig. 3.10 shows the two different indole
isomers. Based on their molecular dimensions, the linear indole product is less bulky
in steric conformation. Therefore, the selective synthesis of indole isomers, in
principle, could be achieved using catalysts with spatially restricted reaction
83
environment. Zeolites were studied because these microporous aluminosilicates had
micropores of diameters comparable with molecular dimensions.[38,39] When H-beta
was used as catalyst in our experiment, the ratio of linear to bulky product was found
to be 71:29. This is close to the ratio 74:26 reported by Kunkeler et al.[38] Zeolite Hbeta has a three-dimensional channel system with sizes 7.6 × 7.4 × 11 (Å). The pore
structure is feasible for intraporous catalysis to occur whereas the use of molecular
sieves with one-dimensional channel systems results in non-shape-selective catalytic
activity because the reaction occurs at the outer surface of the crystallites.[40]
Calculation based on thermodynamic equilibrium showed that the ratio of
linear to bulky product should be 31:69. This is because the bulky indole isomer was
calculated to be more stable by ca. 2.7 kJ/mol.[38] Based on the large discrepancy
between the calculated value and experimentally obtained data, it was concluded that
this reaction was kinetically controlled. The restricted transition state selectivity was
suggested by Rigutto et al.[40] to be the most likely mechanism for determining
regioselectivity. By this assumption, the selectivity should depend on the relative rates
of formation of the intermediates enehydrazine isomers, and this step is assigned as
the rate determining step of the catalytic indole reaction.
N
H
2-ethyl-3-propyl-indole
N
H
2-butyl-3-methyl-indole
"bulky"
"linear"
9.8 * 8.3 * 3.7
12.5 * 6.5 * 3.7
Fig. 3.10 Linear and bulky indole products with molecular dimensions in Å
84
Table 3.9 Selectivity a to 2-butyl-3-methyl indole (linear) and 2-ethyl-3-propyl indole
(bulky)
Drying
Selectivity
Selectivity
Sample
Temperature
(linear)
(bulky)
(°C)
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
Zr(OH)4
Nb2O5
25% Nb2O5- Zr(OH)4 coppt
25% Nb2O5/ MCM-41
H-beta (Si/Al 12.5)
a
reaction time 8 h
100
200
300
100
200
300
100
200
60.3
59.6
59.8
60.4
59.8
59.8
59.8
59.5
39.7
40.4
40.2
39.6
40.2
40.2
40.2
40.5
300
100
200
59.1
60.5
60.1
40.9
39.5
39.9
300
100
200
300
100
200
59.9
60.7
60.3
59.9
60.2
59.8
40.1
39.3
39.7
40.1
39.8
40.2
300
100
300
100
100
500
60.0
60.9
61.6
60.7
63.1
71.0
40.0
39.1
38.4
39.3
36.9
29.0
In this study, although the supported niobium oxide catalysts have larger pore
sizes than H-beta, preferential formation of linear 2-butyl-3-methyl indole was still
observed. This suggests that the pores of the solid samples may play a role in the
selectivity, although to a lesser extent than that of microporous zeolite. Indeed, this
hypothesis is supported by the slightly higher selectivity of 63% to the linear indole
85
isomer over 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41 where the mean pore diameter is in the MCM-41supported sample is narrowly distributed around ~ 3.5 nm.
3.4.2 Effect of Drying Temperature
Drying the catalysts at 200°C had no significant effect on the activity. For
catalysts with niobium oxide loadings of 10 wt.% and 20 wt.%, the activity was even
slightly increased (Fig. 3.11). However, after drying at 300°C, most of the samples
except for 40 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 were less active. As discussed earlier, when
drying the catalysts up to 200°C, only the coordinated water (strongly bound
chemisorbed water) was lost. Beyond 200°C, the surface hydroxyl groups were
removed which may led to a reduction of the surface acidity and active sites of the
catalysts. Furthermore, the decrease of surface area could be another factor that
accounted for the lower activity.
3.4.3 Indole Reaction with Cyclohexanone
The synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole from phenylhydrazine and
cyclohexanone was carried out by Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts (Fig. 3.12). The reaction
rate was about two times faster than that of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone.
Similarly, the highest catalytic activity was obtained for catalyst with niobium oxide
loadings close to a monolayer. In particular, 30 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 showed the best
activity and the reaction almost completed within 4 h. The rate of reaction for 25 wt.%
Nb2O5/MCM-41 was 86%, and this was similar to that of 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4, 88%
(Table 3.10). However, the coprecipitated 25 wt.% Nb2O5-Zr(OH)4 sample was less
active and the conversion of carbazole after 4 h was only 54%. The reaction using
microporous zeolite beta (Si/Al = 12.5) also led to a high reaction rate with a
86
conversion 84% in 4 h reaction time. Previously, Bhattacharya et al.[41] synthesized
1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole using a number of different zeolites. They reported the
best yields of slightly higher than 60% were achieved by H-Y and H-beta. The
reaction conditions were 2.7 mmol phenylhydrazine and 5.5 mmol cyclohexanone in
10 mL methanol with 1 g catalyst at 333 K and the reaction time was 18 h. The high
conversion from Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts showed that these catalysts are efficient for
Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with ketones.
100.00
90.00
80.00
conversion (% )
70.00
60.00
50.00
40.00
30.00
20.00
10.00
0.00
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
reaction time (h)
Fig. 3.12 The Fischer indole synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole
over (♦) hydrous zirconia, and (□) 10% (■) 20% (×) 30% (▲) 40%
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
87
100
100C
90
200C
80
300C
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Zr(OH)4
10%
20%
25%
30%
40%
Nb2O5
Fig. 3.11 Conversion to indole products over 10 – 40 wt. % Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts , Nb2O5 and Zr(OH)4 after drying at ( ) 100°C, (
200°C, and () 300°C
)
88
Table 3.10 Conversion to 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole after 4 h
Sample
Conversion
(%)
10% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
67.1
20% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
86.9
25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
88.3
30% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
99.6
40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
82.5
25% Nb2O5- Zr(OH)4 coppt
53.8
25% Nb2O5/ MCM-41
86.2
Zr(OH)4
38.7
H-beta (Si/Al 12.5)
83.7
3.5 Recycling of Catalysts
3.5.1 Leaching of Catalysts
The possibility of leaching was checked by filtering out the 30 wt.%
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 from the reaction mixture of phenylhydrazine and cyclohexanone
after 1 h. No further increase in conversion was observed in the catalyst-free system
(Figure 3.13).
3.5.2 Regeneration of Catalysts
Three methods are used to regenerate 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts. By
washing with p-xylene solvent, the organic compounds adsorbed on the surface of
catalyst were not removed as the catalyst still remained dark brown color. The activity
after recycling was only ~ 50% of the activity for the fresh sample (Fig. 3.14).
89
60.00
removal of catalyst
Conversion (%)
50.00
40.00
30.00
20.00
10.00
0.00
0
1
2
3
4
Reaction time (h)
5
6
Fig. 3.13 Catalyst leaching test
Using method 2, washing the catalyst with H2O2 partially removed the
adsorbed organic compounds. The color of the catalyst became pale yellow after
washing. Rehydration of the catalyst in 5 M ammonia solution indeed resumed the
acidity. With Hammett indicator tests and n-butylamine titration, the acid strength and
number of acid sites of the rehydrated catalyst were determined to be even greater
than the fresh sample, with pKa ≤ - 3.0 and number of acid sites = 0.592 mmol/g.
However, the catalyst only regained ~ 80% activity in the Fischer indole reaction.
In method 3, instead of washing catalyst in H2O2 at room temperature, the
mixed solution was heated up to 40 °C. The adsorbed organic compounds were
completely removed as the color of the catalyst changed back to white. The acid
strength was the same as the fresh sample, but the number of acid sites decreased to
0.113 mmol/g. Surprisingly, the activity of the catalyst was fully recovered, and was
90
even higher than that of the fresh sample. This might be due to the generation of
active hydroxyl groups during the regeneration procedures.
100
fresh
90
recycled
80
Conversion (%)
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
method 1
method 2
method 3
Fig. 3.14 Regeneration of 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
3.6 Conclusion
Hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalysts with loadings of 10 to
40 wt.% Nb2O5 were prepared by wet impregnation with niobium chloride. The
samples retained the high surface area and pore structure of the support, suggesting a
uniform overlayer. Theoretical monolayers of 0.33 to 2.0 were achieved with these
loadings. The Fischer indole synthesis of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone and with
cyclohexanone was achieved with high conversions. The most active catalysts had
loadings of 25 – 30 wt.% Nb2O5, which is close to a monolayer coverage. The activity
of the catalysts was the highest when dried at 100 – 200 °C. Use of siliceous MCM-41
as a support also resulted in an active catalyst. The good activity of the supported
niobium oxide catalysts makes this a green route to the synthesis of indoles.
91
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94
Chapter IV
Study of Boria-Zirconia Catalysts
4.1 Introduction
Supported boria catalysts are widely used for various solid catalyzed reactions
such as vapor phase Beckmann rearrangement of cyclohexanone oxime,[1]
isomerization of 1-butene,[2] and dehydration of alcohol.[3] These catalysts are usually
prepared using impregnation method, by depositing boria on metal oxide supports,
such as SiO2, Al2O3, TiO2 and ZrO2 from an aqueous solution of boric acid. It is well
established in the literature that the nature of support is crucial and responsible for the
catalytic performance. By choosing an appropriate oxide support, the activity,
selectivity and stability of the catalyst for a typical reaction can be greatly improved.[4]
Zirconia is often used as the supporting material because for many catalytic
reactions, zirconia supported catalysts produce better catalytic activity than those
using conventional oxide supports.[5,6] Zirconia supported boron oxide containing
30 mol% of boron has been reported by Arata and coworkers[7,8] as a superacid
catalyst with acidic strength H0 = − 13.0.
The properties and activity of supported boria catalysts can be improved by
proper control of variable factors such as loadings and dispersion of boria.[9–12] Xu et
al.[4] studied the gas phase Beckmann rearrangement cyclohexanone oxime over
zirconia supported boria catalysts. They compared the activity and selectivity of the
zirconia supported boria catalyst with those supported on Al2O3, TiO2, SiO2, MgO
and HZSM-5 at a boria loading level of 10 wt.%. It was found the zirconia supported
95
catalyst showed the best catalytic performance for lactam synthesis. The effect of
boria loadings for the zirconia supported catalysts was also investigated. In the range
of 0 – 20 wt.% boria loading, the selectivity to lactam increased with increasing boria
loading, but as the conversion of cyclohexanone oxime decreased, the yield of lactam
exhibited a maximum at a loading level of 10 wt.%. Malshe et al.[13] applied the boriazirconia solid catalyst in another acid catalyzed reaction, namely, the selective Cmethylation of phenol with methanol. A series of boria-zirconia catalysts with 5 -30
mol% boria loadings were tested. The maximum conversion was observed for 5 mol%
boria-zirconia sample where a highly uniform dispersion of boria on the zirconia
support was achieved.
It is well established from the literature that the performance of supported
boria catalyst is strongly dependent on the calcination temperature.[14-16] Mao et
al.[17-20] did a systematic study on the activity of B2O3/ZrO2-TiO2 catalysts in the
vapor phase Beckmann rearrangement of cyclohexanone oxime. They investigated the
influence of the preparation method, boria loading, calcination temperature and also
the deactivation and regeneration of the catalysts. It was found that the crystallization
of ZrO2-TiO2 started at 600°C. At this temperature, the surface area, the acidity and
the catalytic activity of the catalyst began to decrease. However, at a lower
temperature of 500 °C, the acid strength was weak due to the incomplete interaction
of B2O3 with ZrO2-TiO2. Deactivation of the B2O3/ZrO2-TiO2 catalyst occurred and
was mainly caused by the deposition of coke. By calcining the deactivated catalyst at
600°C in air for 8 h, the activity was fully recovered.
96
In this work, the possible application of boria-zirconia solid acid catalysts in
the Fisher indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone was explored. The
morphology, textural properties, and acidity of the catalysts are characterized. The
effects of boria loading, calcination temperature and recycling of the catalysts are
investigated. The results are compared with that of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts.
4.2 Preparation of Catalysts
4.2.1 Preparation of Boria-zirconia Catalysts
Catalysts were prepared following a similar method described by Malshe et
al.[21] In a typical synthesis procedure for 2 g of 25 wt.% boria zirconia, 0.888 g boric
acid (Sigma-Aldrich) was dissolved in 50 mL deionized water. The zirconia support
was prepared following the procedure described in chapter 3 and was added to the
boric acid solution with constant stirring to obtain slurry. After heating to dryness, it
was further dried overnight in an oven at 100°C and calcined at 500°C for 5 h. A
series of catalysts containing 3, 5, 10, 20, 30 and 40 wt.% of boria were prepared
similarly using the corresponding amount of boric acid and zirconia support
(Table 4.1).
All catalysts were characterized by X-ray diffraction and nitrogen
adsorption/desorption measurement to study the crystal phases and textural properties.
ICP-AES was used to determine the actual boria loading. Thermal analysis was
performed to determine the phase transition enthalpy. Infrared spectroscopy revealed
information about the bonding structures of boria overlayer. Acidity of the catalysts
was measured by NH3 TPD and by base titration using Hammett indicators.
97
Table 4.1 Amount of reagents used in preparing the boria-zirconia catalysts
H3BO3 (g)
Sample Name
Zr(OH)4 (g)
3%
1.94
0.107
5%
1.90
0.178
10%
1.80
0.355
20%
1.60
0.710
25%
1.50
0.888
30%
1.40
1.07
40%
1.20
1.42
4.2.2 Recycling of Catalysts
The used catalyst was separated by centrifugation, dried and regenerated by
calcining at 500°C for 5 h. The morphology, textural properties and acidity of the
recycled catalysts were determined. The catalytic activity was tested for up to three
rounds of experiments. The catalysts used in these three rounds are named “fresh”,
“recycle 1”, and “recycle 2”, respectively.
4.3 Catalyst Characterization
4.3.1 Powder X-ray Diffraction
The X-ray diffractogram of boria-zirconia catalysts with different boria
loadings are shown in Fig. 4.1. For samples with boria loadings from 3 to 20 wt.%,
the XRD results showed that only the amorphous phase was present despite the
calcination at 500°C. The transformation of amorphous hydrous zirconia to crystalline
zirconium oxide usually starts from 450°C.[22] The formation of metastable tetragonal
phase in the boria-zirconia catalysts was postponed to higher temperatures, indicating
that the deposition of boria overlayer stabilized amorphous phase of the zirconia
98
support. This is similar to previous observations for Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 and also zirconia
catalysts doped with other metals.[23] At boria loadings of 25 wt.% and higher, two
diffraction peaks at 2θ ~ 15° and 28° were observed. These two peaks are consistent
with the most intense peaks of boric acid showing that aggregation of boron oxide
molecules occurs at high boria loadings.[24]
Three 25 wt.% boria-zirconia catalysts were prepared at different calcination
temperatures of 100°C, 500°C and 650°C, and their X-ray diffractograms are shown
in Fig. 4.2. At temperatures of 100°C and 500°C, only the boric acid peaks at 2θ ~ 15°
and 28° were detected. After calcination at 650°C, crystalline zirconia was formed.
The peaks at 30.2°, 35.3°, 50.4°, and 59.7° are due to the diffractions of (111), (200),
(220) and (131) planes of tetragonal ZrO2, whereas the peak around 28.2° can be
assigned to be the diffraction of (11 1 ) of monoclinic ZrO2.[25] The peak at ~15° from
boric acid could no longer be seen.
The Debye-Scherrer equation was used to estimate the crystallite sizes of the
boria-zirconia samples with boria loadings of 25 wt.% and higher from the measured
line width of the peak ~28°. The average crystallite sizes are 17.8, 18.6 and 18.0 nm
for 25, 30 and 40 wt.% boria zirconia, respectively. The three similar values indicate
that although aggregation of boron oxide molecules starts at boria loading of 25 wt.%,
the degree of aggregation does not aggravate with higher boria loadings.
99
1400
1200
40%
Intensity (cps)
1000
30%
25%
800
20%
600
10%
400
5%
3%
200
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2θ (°)
Fig. 4.1 X-ray diffractograms of boria-zirconia catalysts with boria loading from 3 to
40 wt.%, calcination temperature 500°C
1200
1000
Intensity (cps)
800
650 °C
600
500 °C
400
100 °C
200
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2θ (°)
Fig. 4.2 X-ray diffractograms of 25 wt.% boria zirconia at calcination temperature
100°C, 500°C, and 650°C
100
4.3.2 Textural Properties
Table 4.2 shows the surface area and pore volume of boria-zirconia catalysts.
Impregnation of small amounts of boria (3 to 10 wt.%) increased the surface area
from 179 to 226 m2/g. This promotion effect is also seen in zirconia catalysts with
other metal dopants.[23] However, at higher loadings, 20 to 40 wt.%, the surface area
dropped drastically, with only 23 m2/g for the 40 wt.% boria zirconia sample. This
can be attributed to the aggregation of boron oxide to form bulk boron oxide at the
surface of the zirconia support. This result is supported by the detection of bulk boric
acid peaks in the XRD measurement. The pore volume of boria-zirconia catalysts
exhibited a similar trend as that of the surface area. At boria loadings of 3 - 10 wt.%,
the pore volume was relatively large, in the range of 0.24 – 0.27 cm3/g. Beyond
20 wt.%, a significant decrease of pore volume was observed.
The nitrogen adsorption/desorption isotherms of all boria-zirconia samples
calcined at 500°C were similar, with less volume of nitrogen adsorbed/desorbed for
catalyst at high boria loadings (Fig. 4.3). The size of pores ranged from 2.9 – 10 nm
with a narrow distribution centered at ~3.5nm and bigger pores from 4 to 10 nm. As
the boria loading increased, the distribution of the bigger pores narrowed, suggesting
that the overlayer is uniformly coating the pore channels. For loadings up to 30 wt.%,
the small pores centered at ~3.5 nm are unaffected. Only for the 40 wt.% sample is
there a significant loss in porosity. The isotherms of 25 wt.% boria-zirconia samples
calcined at 100°C, 500°C, and 650°C were compared (Fig. 4.4). The sample dried at
100°C had a smaller area than that calcined at 500°C. This may be due to the
incomplete removal of water from the sample, hence hindering the absorption of
nitrogen. On the other hand, 650°C calcined sample exhibited a different isotherm
101
with the hysteresis loop at around P/P0 = 0.9. This shows that the smaller pores had
collapsed after calcination at this temperature, resulting in only mesopores of 10 –
40 nm. Following calcination at 650°C the surface area decreased drastically from
115 to 20 m2/g.
Table 4.2 Textural properties of boria-zirconia catalysts
Sample
Calcination
SBET
temperature
Pore volume
2
(m /g)
(cm3/g)
(°C)
3% boria-zirconia
500
179
0.27
5% boria-zirconia
500
195
0.24
10% boria-zirconia
500
226
0.25
20% boria-zirconia
500
190
0.21
25% boria-zirconia
500
115
0.15
30% boria-zirconia
500
70
0.11
40% boria-zirconia
500
23
0.05
25% boria-zirconia
100
29
0.06
25% boria-zirconia
650
20
0.22
The amount of boria impregnated on the zirconia support was measured by
inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES). The actual
boria loadings were slightly higher than the expected value for all boria-zirconia
samples (Table 4.3). Based on the physical measurement results done by Xu et al.,[26]
the monolayer coverage of boria on zirconia surface was estimated to be about
102
12 μmol B2O3/m2-ZrO2. Using this value, the monolayer coverage of the boriazicronia catalysts was calculated as follows (equations 4.1 – 4.3):
Calculation of theoretical monolayer coverage
n(B2O3) =
actual B2O3 loading
molecular weight of B2O3
(4.1)
where n(B2O3) = number of moles of B2O3 in catalyst,
Average number of boron atoms =
n(B2O3) × 2 × NA
SBET
(4.2)
where NA is the Avogadro Constant,
Monolayer coverage =
Average number of boron atoms
7.23 × 1018 atoms / m 2
(4.3)
If the boria stayed at the surface, then monolayer coverage should occur for
samples with loadings between 5 and 10 wt.%. At loadings of 20 wt.% and higher, the
boria overlayer was more than three layers thick.
These results agree with the
observation of diffraction peaks of boria in the sample. It was reported[4] that at boria
loadings below a monolayer, the first overlayer of boria on the zirconia surface should
be composed of the tetrahedral oxygen-coordinated boron (BO4) units. Trigonal BO3
units are formed at higher boria loadings and are presumable stacked onto the
interconnected BO4 units of the monolayer.
Infrared studies show that samples with 20 – 40 wt. % boria exhibited
absorption bands at 650 cm-1, 885 cm-1, and 1200 cm-1 and their intensity grew with
boria content (Fig. 4.5). Comparing with the spectra of boric acid and borax (not
103
shown),[6] the absorption bands at 650 cm-1, 885 cm-1, and 1200 cm-1 can be assigned
as the trigonal BO3 structures present in boric acid.[27,28] Samples with low loadings (3
– 10 wt.%) showed two broad absorption bands at 1250 – 1450 cm-1, and 1550 1700 cm-1, indicative of the presence of tetragonal BO4 units. As the boria loading
increased, the band at 1250 – 1450 cm-1 shifted up to 1580 cm-1 while the band at
1550 - 1700 cm-1 diminished.
Table 4.3 Boria loading and surface coverage
Average number
Sample
Boria
loadings
(wt.%)
a
a
of boron atoms
Monolayer
coverage
-2
(m )
3% boria-zirconia
3.79
3.66 ×1018
0.51
5% boria-zirconia
6.70
5.95×1018
0.82
10% boria-zirconia
13.57
1.07×1019
1.48
20% boria-zirconia
25.84
2.43×1019
3.36
25% boria-zirconia
32.16
5.00×1019
6.92
30% boria-zirconia
37.31
9.54×1019
13.2
40% boria-zirconia
44.67
3.47×1020
48
from ICP measurement
4.3.3 Thermal Analysis
The TG-DTA diagrams of hydrous zirconia and boria-zirconia catalysts are
plotted in Fig. 4.6. Below 200°C, the initial weight loss was attributed to the loss of
adsorbed moisture on the surface of the catalysts. The total amount of water loss
(Table 4.4 and 4.5) was calculated in the form of ratio H2O/oxides (mol/mol) as
follows (equations 4.4 – 4.8).
104
250
0.06
3%
0.05
200
0.04
150
0.03
100
0.02
50
0.01
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
200
0
5
10
15
20
0
5
10
15
20
0
5
10
15
20
0.09
5%
0.08
150
0.07
0.06
0.05
100
0.04
0.03
50
0.02
0.01
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
200
1
10%
150
100
50
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
200
1
20%
150
100
50
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
150
1
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm3/g)
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm3/g)
0
0.1
0.09
0.08
0.07
0.06
0.05
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01
0
0.1
0.09
0.08
0.07
0.06
0.05
0.04
0.03
0.02
0.01
0
0
5
10
15
20
0.09
25%
0.08
0.07
100
0.06
0.05
0.04
0.03
50
0.02
0.01
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
100
0
5
10
15
20
0
5
10
15
20
15
20
1
30%
0.07
0.06
0.05
0.04
50
0.03
0.02
0.01
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
50
1
0.014
40%
0.012
0.01
0.008
0.006
0.004
0.002
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
1
0
5
10
Average diameter (nm)
Fig. 4.3 Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves and pore volume distribution of boriazirconia catalysts with different boria loadings
105
160
0.04
100°C
140
0.02
650˚C
0.01
Volume adsorbed/desorbed (cm3/g)
N 2 volum e adsorbed/desorbed (cm 3 /g)
0.03
120
100
500˚C
80
60
40
100˚C
20
0
0
5
10
15
0.09
20
500°C
0.06
0.03
0
0
5
10
15
20
0.01
650°C
0.005
0
0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
20
40
60
80
1
Average diameter (nm)
Relative Pressure (P/P0)
Fig. 4.4 Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves and pore volume distribution of
25wt.% boria-zirconia sample calcined at 100°C, 500°C, and 650°C
350
(h)
(g)
300
(f)
200
(d)
150
(c)
(b)
100
50
(a)
1800
tansmittance(%)
250
(e)
1600
1400
1200
1000
800
0
600
wavenumber(cm-1)
Fig. 4.5 Infrared spectra of (a) boric acid (b) 3% (c) 5% (d) 10% (e) 20% (f) 25% (g)
30% and (h) 40% boria-zirconia
106
Calculation for amount of water lost H2O/oxides (mol/mol)
Weight of oxides (mg)
= total weight of sample (mg) × percentage weight 2 (%)
(4.4)
where percentage weight 2 (%) is the final weight percentage of sample after running
TGA program
Moles of oxides (mmol) =
weight of oxides (mg)
M (g/mol)
(4.5)
where M is the molecular weight of oxides,
e.g. Molecular weight of 5% B2O3/ZrO2a
= 0.05 × molecular weight of B2O3 + 0.95 × molecular weight of ZrO2
a
catalyst after running TGA program is in oxide form B2O3/ZrO2
Weight of water lost (mg)
= total weight of sample (mg) × percentage H2O (%)
(4.6)
where percentage H2O (%) is the weight percentage of water lost
Moles of H2O lost (mmol) =
H2O/oxides (mol/mol) =
weight of water (mg)
molecular weight of H2O (18 g/mol)
Moles of H2O lost (mmol)
Moles of oxides (mmol)
(4.7)
(4.8)
107
Table 4.4 Total amount of water lost (%) in TGA for boria-zirconia catalysts
H2Oc (%)
Sample
Weight (mg) Weight 1a Weight 2b
(%)
(%)
3% boria-zirconia
19.37
91.03
87.94
3.09
5% boria-zirconia
28.78
89.07
85.60
3.47
10% boria-zirconia
30.76
89.90
86.20
3.7
20% boria-zirconia
26.01
89.29
84.53
4.76
25% boria-zirconia
10.25
87.53
82.79
5.34
30% boria-zirconia
15.27
85.60
79.26
6.34
40% boria-zirconia
13.47
83.46
75.45
8.01
a
initial weight percentage of sample after isotherm at 100°C for 30 min
final weight percentage of sample after running TGA program
c
amount of H2O = weight change
b
Table 4.5 Calculation for amount of water lost H2O/oxides (mol/mol) for boriazirconia catalysts
Sample
Weight of Moles of Weight Moles of H2O/oxides
oxides
oxides
of H2O
H2O
(mg)
(mmol)
(mg)
(mmol)
3% boria-zirconia
17.03
0.140
0.60
0.033
0.24
5% boria-zirconia
24.64
0.204
1.00
0.055
0.27
10% boria-zirconia
26.52
0.225
1.14
0.063
0.28
20% boria-zirconia
22.00
0.196
1.24
0.069
0.35
25% boria-zirconia
8.49
0.077
0.55
0.031
0.40
30% boria-zirconia
12.10
0.113
0.97
0.054
0.48
40% boria-zirconia
10.16
0.100
1.08
0.060
0.60
(mol/mol)
108
The amount of water lost for boria-zirconia catalysts was 0.24 - 0.60
H2O/oxides (mol/mol), which was about half of the amount of water lost for
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples. This is because the calcination temperature of boria-zriconia
catalysts was 500°C and at this temperature, most of the surface hydroxyl groups
were removed. Constant weight was obtained above 500°C. As the boria loading
increased, the ratio H2O/oxides (mol/mol) increased as well, indicating that the
hydroxyl groups remained in boria-zirconia catalysts were mainly from boria
component, not zirconia.
An endothermic peak with maximum at 130°C to 170°C was observed in the
DTA profile for all boria-zirconia samples. This peak is attributed to the desorption of
physically adsorbed water and the dehydration of H3BO3.[29] Because the water
physically adsorbed on catalysts is more easily removed than that produced by
dehydration of boric acid, a shift of the maximum of the peak towards higher
temperatures with increasing of boria loading was observed, from about 130°C for 3
wt.% boria-zirconia to about 170°C for 40 wt% boria-zirconia. At the same time, the
intensity of this endothermic peak increased with the increase of boria loading.
Moreover, an exothermic band was found in all TGA profiles without a
corresponding weight loss in TG diagram. From this observation, it was concluded the
exothermic peak represented the crystallization of amorphous zirconia support. For
pure hydrous zirconia, this phase transition happened at about 450°C. However, after
impregnation with boria, the phase transition was postponed to 630 – 720°C.
Therefore, impregnation of boria onto the surface of zirconia stabilized the amorphous
phase of zirconia component. The area of the exothermal DTA peaks decreased as
109
increase of boria loadings. The relationship between the peak area (A) of the DTA
curve and an enthalpy change (∆H) for a mass (m) of sample is as equation 4.9:[30]
A = + ∆HmK
(4.9)
where K is the calibration constant,
Using the crystallization enthalpy of pure zirconia 28.2 kJmol-1[31] (229 J/g), and
exothermic peak area of zirconia integrated from the DTA curve, the calibration
constant K can be found. Applying the value of K, the enthalpy of crystallinzation for
boria-zirconia catalysts were calculated (Table 4.6).
The glow phenomenon is believed to be a visible manifestation of the
coalescence of primary colloidal particles to larger masses with consequence release
of surface energy.[32] The exotherm could be a characteristic feature of both the
crystallization and glow phenomenon occurring simultaneously. The enthalpy of
crystallization of zirconia was lowered by deposition of boria on its surface. Also,
except for 3 wt.% boria-zirconia sample, the enthalpy of crystallization for all other
boria-zirconia decreased with increasing boria loadings, from 208 J/g for 5 wt.%
boria-zirconia to 9.67 J/g for 40 wt.% sample. A decrease in the enthalpy of
crystallization with increase in boria loading indicates that the glow phenomenon
slowly decreases with increasing boria content.
110
0.08
Weight (%)
0.04
80
0.02
0
70
-0.02
0.03
91
0.025
exo
Weight (%)
0.06
Temperature difference (°C/mg)
(b)
exo
90
0.035
92
(a)
0.02
90
0.015
0.01
89
0.005
0
88
Temperature difference (°C/mg)
100
-0.005
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
-0.04
900
87
100
200
300
Temperature (°C)
400
500
600
700
-0.01
900
800
Temperature (°C)
0.025
90
0.07
90
(c)
(d)
0.015
0.01
88
0.005
87
0
-0.005
86
-0.01
85
100
200
300
400
500
600
Temperature (°C)
700
800
-0.015
900
89
exo
0.06
0.05
0.04
Weight (%)
Weight (%)
exo
Temperature difference (°C/mg)
0.02
89
88
0.03
0.02
87
0.01
0
86
Temperature difference (°C/mg)
60
100
-0.01
85
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
-0.02
900
Temperature (°C)
111
88
0.025
0.08
(f)
(e)
88
0.01
87
0.005
86
0
-0.005
85
-0.01
84
83
100
87
0.06
86
0.04
85
84
0
83
-0.02
-0.015
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
82
100
-0.02
900
200
300
400
500
600
700
0.05
86
83
0.01
82
exo
0
81
-0.01
80
-0.02
79
-0.03
400
500
600
Temperature (°C)
700
800
-0.04
900
0.06
81
Weight (%)
0.02
83
82
Temperature difference (°C/mg)
0.03
84
Weight (%)
(h)
0.04
85
300
-0.04
900
0.08
(g)
200
800
Temperature (°C)
Temperature (°C)
78
100
0.02
exo
0.04
80
79
0.02
exo
78
0
77
-0.02
76
75
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Temperature difference (°C/mg)
Weight (%)
exo
Weight (%)
0.015
Temperature difference (°C/mg)
0.02
89
Temperature difference (°C/mg)
90
-0.04
900
Temperature (°C)
Fig. 4.6 TG–DTA diagrams of (a) hydrous zirconia (b) 3% (c) 5% (d) 10% (e) 20% (f) 25% (g) 30% and (h) 40% boria-zirconia
TG curve
DTA curve
112
Table 4.6 Peak maxima of exothermic peaks and enthalpy of crystallization of
hydrous zirconia and boria-zirconia catalysts
Sample
Peak maxima
Enthalpy
(°C)
(J/g)
Hydrous zirconia
447
229
3% boria-zirconia
630
148
5% boria-zirconia
681
208
10% boria-zirconia
718
151
20% boria-zirconia
696
67.7
25% boria-zirconia
678
42.8
30% boria-zirconia
664
25.7
40% boria-zirconia
655
9.67
4.3.4 Acidity Measurement
The surface acidity of boria-zirconia catalysts was measured by temperature
programmed desorption using ammonia as a probe molecule. From the ammonia TPD
profiles (Fig. 4.7), it can be seen that all desorption occurred below 400°C. For 3%
boria-zirconia, the maximum of the desorption peak occurred between 150 – 270 °C,
corresponding to medium acid sites. As boria loadings reached up to 20 wt.%, a
slightly shift of the desorption peak to lower temperatures was observed. However,
beyond 20 wt.%, the maximum shifted towards higher temperature, and for 30 wt.%
and 40 wt.% samples, both strong (270 -320°C) and medium (150 – 270°C) acid sites
were observed. The number of acid sites per unit area generally increased with boria
loadings (Table 4.7). Malshe et al.[21] also found that the 30 mol% B2O3/ZrO2 had
higher acid site density than the 5 mol% sample.
113
3.00E-11
2.50E-11
(h)
(g)
Ion current (A)
2.00E-11
(f)
1.50E-11
1.00E-11
(e)
(d)
(c)
5.00E-12
(b)
(a)
0.00E+00
160
240
320
400
480
Temperature (°C)
Fig. 4.7 Ammonia TPD profiles of (a) 3% (b) 5% (c) 10% (d) 20% (e) 25% (f)
30% (g) 40% boria-zirconia (calcination temperature 500 °C) and (h) 25%
boria-zirconia (calcination temperature 650°C)
The 25 wt.% boria-zirconia sample showed higher acid strength when calcined
at 650°C than at 500°C. A pronounced desorption peak was observed at higher
temperatures. A similar shift was found for B2O3/TiO2-ZrO2.[19] According to the
postulate of Mao et al.[19], the phase transition of amorphous to crystalline form ZrO2
happened during 500 – 650°C, and therefore, before the transformation, the reaction
of B2O3 with the zirconia support was not complete, so only weaker acid sites were
produced. This phenomenon was also observed in the preparation of WO3/ZrO2,
where tungsten oxide combines with ZrO2 to create superacid sites when tetragonal
crystalline phase of ZrO2 was formed.[33]
114
Table 4.7 Number of acid sites of boria-zirconia catalysts determined by NH3 TPD
Sample Name
Weight
Total acid sites
Average acid sites
(g)
(mmol)
(mmol/g)
(m-2)
3% boria-zirconia
500°C
0.247
0.071
0.29
9.59 × 1017
5% boria-zirconia
500°C
0.250
0.054
0.22
6.49 × 1017
10% boria-zirconia
500°C
0.263
0.078
0.30
7.86 × 1017
20% boria-zirconia
500°C
0.253
0.114
0.45
1.42 × 1018
25% boria-zirconia
500°C
0.152
0.047
0.31
1.62 × 1018
25% boria-zirconia
650°C
0.153
0.056
0.37
1.11 × 1019
30% boria-zirconia
500°C
0.229
0.081
0.36
3.06 × 1018
40% boria-zirconia
500°C
0.237
0.042
0.18
4.66 × 1018
To compare the acidity of boria-zirconia catalysts with that of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4
samples, color tests using Hammett indicator and amine titration were also performed
to determine the acid strength and number of acid sites (Table 4.8 and Table 4.9).
3 wt.% and 5 wt.% boria-zirconia exhibited no color change for any of the
indicators, indicating that the two catalysts had acid strength lower than pKa of +4.8.
As the loading of boria increased, the acid strength of the catalysts increased as well.
From 20 wt.% boria loading onwards, the catalysts showed acid strength with pKa
greater than +1.5. However, 25 wt.% boria-zirconia with drying/calcination
temperature 100 °C and 650 °C showed low acid strength. For 30 wt.% and 40 wt.%
115
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples, the acid strength were higher than all boria-zirconia
catalysts, with pKa greater than -3.0.
The number of acid sites showed a similar trend as that determined by NH3
TPD. The maximum number of acid sites was obtained at boria loading of 20 wt.%,
and decreased for further deposition of boria. The number of acid sites determined by
n-butylamine titration was generally larger than that determined by NH3 TPD except
for 25 wt.% boria-zirconia calcined at 650°C. It is probably because the use of
different base molecules as well as different operation temperatures. Compared with
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples, at the same loading level, boria-zirconia catalysts contained
more acid sites although their acid strength might be lower.
Table 4.9 Number of acid sites of boria-zirconia catalysts measured by n-butylamine
titrationa
Sample
Acid sites
a
b
mmol/g
/m2
10% boria-zirconia
0.315
8.39 x 1017
20% boria-zirconia
0.899
2.85 x 1018
25% boria-zirconia
0.808
4.23 x 1018
30% boria-zirconia
0.797
6.86 x 1018
40% boria-zirconia
0.477
1.25 x 1019
25% boria-zirconia (100°C)b
0.183
3.80 x 1018
52% boria-zirconia (100°C)
0.179
5.39 x 1018
indicator used: methyl red (pKa = +4.8)
calcination/drying temperature; the other catalysts were calcined at 500°C
116
Table 4.8 Measuring acid strength of boria-zirconia catalysts using Hammett indicators
Sample
pKa
a
b
Methyl red
Methyl yellow
2-aminoazotoluene
4-phenyldiphenylamine
Dicinnamalacetone
Benzalacetophenone
+4.8
+3.3
+2.0
+1.5
-3.0
-5.6
3% boria-zirconia
-
-
-
-
-
-
5% boria-zirconia
-
-
-
-
-
-
10% boria-zirconia
+
-
-
-
-
-
20% boria-zirconia
+
+
+
+
-
-
25% boria-zirconia
+
+
+
+
-
-
30% boria-zirconia
+
+
+
+
-
-
40% boria-zirconia
+
+
+
+
-
-
25% boria-zirconia (100 °C)b
+
+a
-
-
-
-
25% boria-zirconia (650 °C)b
+
+a
-
-
-
-
slightly color change
calcination/drying temperature; the other boria-zirconia catalysts were calcined at 500°C
117
4.4 Catalytic Activity
4.4.1 Effect of Boria Loadings
The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone to 2-butyl-3methyl indole and 2-ethyl-3-propyl indole was tested (Fig. 4.8). At 5 wt.% boria
loading, the maximum conversion of 85.1% was reached after 8 h. This is slightly
lower than the maximum conversion of 91.1% obtained from 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4.
At higher boria loadings, the conversion of indole products decreased and the
conversion was only 23.6% for 40 wt.% boria-zirconia catalyst. A similar trend was
found in selective the C-methylation of phenol with methanol over 5 – 30 wt.% boriazirconia catalysts.[21] At 5 wt.% boron oxide loading, the overlayer of boria
approached a monolayer coverage but at higher loadings, multiple layers of boria are
formed. The results showed that a uniform dispersion of boria on zirconia leads to
enhanced activity. When the loading decreased to 3 wt.%, a lower activity was
obtained possibly due to a lower density of active sites on the zirconia support.
Besides indoles, no other product was detected. The selectivity to linear and
bulky indole product was ca. 60:40 (Table 4.10). This ratio is the same as that of
Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples and hydrous zirconia. Therefore, the ratio of indole
selectivity is probably kinetically controlled.
118
100.00
90.00
80.00
Conversion (%)
70.00
60.00
50.00
40.00
30.00
20.00
10.00
0.00
0
2
4
6
Reaction Time (h)
8
10
Fig. 4.8 Conversion of indoles over (♦) 3% (■) 5% (▲) 10% (×) 20% (◊) 25%
(□)30% (+) 40% boria-zirconia
Table 4.10 Conversion and selectivitya of 2-butyl-3-methyl indole (linear) and 2ethyl-3-propyl indole (bulky)
Conversion
Selectivity
Selectivity
Sampleb
(%)
(linear)
(bulky)
(%)
(%)
a
b
3% boria-zirconia
64.3
59.9
40.1
5% boria-zirconia
85.1
59.4
40.6
10% boria-zirconia
78.6
60.7
39.3
20% boria-zirconia
65.4
61.1
38.9
25% boria-zirconia
56.7
60.7
39.3
30% boria-zirconia
29.8
60.4
39.6
40% boria-zirconia
23.6
60.2
39.8
reaction after 8 h reaction; reaction conditions: 140°C, nitrogen protected
all samples calcined to 500°C
119
4.4.2 Effect of Calcination Temperature
The effect of calcination temperature on the catalytic activity of the Fisher
indole synthesis was tested over a 25 wt.% boria-zirconia sample (Fig. 4.9). The
uncalcined sample gave a low indole conversion of ~ 32% after 6 h. After calcination
at 500°C, the activity increased and a conversion of 56.7% was obtained after 8 h.
The increase of catalytic activity is most likely due to the increase of surface area
from 29 to 115 m2/g and pore volume from 0.06 to 0.15 cm3/g. Further increase of the
calcination temperature to 650°C led to a drastic decrease of activity. After 6 h, the
conversion was only 7.1% for 650°C calcined sample. The formation of the
crystalline structure as well as the decrease of surface area could be the reasons for
the low activity. This is in contrast to the findings that crystalline boria-zirconia
formed after calcination at 650 °C was the most active catalyst in the selective
C-methylation of phenol with methanol.[21]
60.00
50.00
Conversion (%)
40.00
30.00
20.00
10.00
0.00
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Reaction Time (h)
Fig. 4.9 Conversion of indoles over 25 wt.% boria-zirconia (♦) uncalcined (■)
calcined at 500°C and (▲) calcined at 650°C
120
4.4.3 Recycling of Catalysts
Catalyst deactivation is a common problem in catalysis. The main reason for
catalyst deactivation is blocking of active sites by the deposition of organic products
on the surface of catalysts or poisoning of the acid sites by adsorption of basic
products. Besides that, some other deactivation mechanisms such as the loss of boron
oxide,[34] and the melting and agglomeration of boron oxide[35] have been reported.
Regeneration of catalyst is always a major concern in heterogeneous catalysis.
One of the most effective methods is recalcining the used catalysts up to 500°C to
remove the adsorbed organic compounds. This method is used in the recycling of the
boria-zirconia samples.
From the X-ray diffractograms (Fig. 4.10), both the fresh and the recycled
sample were X-ray amorphous. No zirconia or boria phase could be seen, indicating
no agglomeration of boron oxide occurred.
The surface area, pore volume and pore size of the fresh and recycled samples
remained quite constant (Table 4.11). The average acid sites determined by ammonia
TPD also showed no significant change (Table 4.12). Therefore, any organic
compounds or basic products which were possibly adsorbed at the surface of the
catalysts had been completely removed by recalcination of the catalysts at 500°C.
From the catalytic activity, the indole conversions obtained after 8 h reaction
for the fresh and recycled samples were similar (Fig. 4.11). Thus, recalcination of the
121
used boria-zirconia to 500°C effectively removed any adsorbed organic products,
allowing the textural properties, acidity, and catalytic activity to be retained.
Compared with Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts, the recycling of boria-zirconia
catalysts is much easier. Only a single and simple procedure is required to fully
recover the properties and activities of the catalysts.
600
500
Intensity (cps)
400
300
(b)
200
100
(a)
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2θ (°)
Fig. 4.10 X-ray diffratograms of (a) fresh 5% boria-zirconia (b) 5% boria-zirconia
recycle 2
Table 4.11 Textural properties of fresh and recycled boria-zirconia
Pore volume
Average pore
Sample
SBET
(m2/g)
(cm3/g)
diameter
(nm)
5% boria-zirconia (500°C)
195
0.24
3.5, 4.7
5% boria-zirconia (recycle 1)
187
0.25
3.5, 4.7
5% boria-zirconia (recycle 2)
186
0.24
3.5, 4.7
122
Table 4.12 Acidity determined by NH3 TPD
Sample Name
Weight
Total acid sites
(g)
(mmol)
Average acid sites
(mmol/g)
(m-2)
5% boria-zirconia
(500°C)
0.250
0.054
0.22
6.49 × 1017
5% boria-zirconia
(recycle 1)
0.224
0.044
0.20
6.31 × 1017
5% boria-zirconia
(recycle 2)
0.298
0.068
0.23
7.35 × 1017
40.00
35.00
Conversion (%)
30.00
25.00
20.00
15.00
10.00
5.00
0.00
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Reaction time (h)
Fig. 4.11 Conversion of indoles over (♦) 5% boria-zirconia fresh (▲) 5%
boria-zirconia recycle 1 (■) 5% boria-zirconia recycle 2
4.5 Conclusion
Boria-zirconia catalysts with boria loadings 3 to 40 wt.% were prepared by
wet impregnation of boric acid on the hydrous zirconia support followed by
calcination. At boria loadings below 25 wt.% , the catalysts had high surface areas.
Aggregation of boron oxide started from boria loading of 25 wt.%, with more than
three overlayers formed on the surface of zirconia support. The first layer of boron
oxide was composed of tetrahedral oxygen-coordinated BO4 units whereas at boria
123
loading higher than a monolayer, trigonal BO3 units were formed. The Fischer indole
reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3-heptanone was achieved with high conversions.
The most active catalysts had loadings of 5 – 10 wt.% B2O3, which is close to a
monolayer coverage. This result is similar to that of Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 samples where
catalysts with niobium oxide approaching a monolayer showed the highest activity.
The optimal calcination temperature for the catalysts was 500°C. The used catalyst
can be simply regenerated by recalcining at 500°C, with textural properties, acidity,
and activity fully recovered.
124
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[...]... distribution (a) hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalyst with Nb2O5 loadings from 0 – 40 wt.%, drying temperature 100°C (b) MCM-41 and 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41 73 TGA curves of hydrous zirconia , niobium oxide and 10 – 40 wt.% hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalysts 75 Pyridine IR of 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 after evacuation at (a) 25°C (b) 100°C and (c) 200°C 80 The Fischer indole reaction of... 30% (+) 40% boria -zirconia 119 Conversion of indoles over 25 wt.% boria -zirconia (♦) uncalcined (■) calcined at 500°C and (▲) calcined at 650°C 120 Fig 3.12 Fig 4.2 Fig 4.3 Fig 4.4 Fig 4.5 Fig 4.6 Fig 4.7 Fig 4.8 Fig 4.9 xiii Fig 4.10 Fig 4.11 X-ray diffratograms of (a) fresh 5% boria -zirconia (b) 5% boria -zirconia recycle 2 Conversion of indoles over (♦) 5% boria -zirconia fresh (▲) 5% boria -zirconia. .. of indole[ 50] 1.2.2 Fischer Indole Synthesis For over a century, the Fischer indole reaction has remained as an extremely useful and important method for the synthesis of a variety of biologically active indole- structure compounds.[51] The Fischer indole reaction is one of the simplest and most efficient methods by which enolizable N-arylhydrazones are easily transformed into indoles In the Fischer indole. .. (e) 20% (f) 25% (g) 30% and (h) 40% boria -zirconia 106 TG–DTA diagrams of (a) hydrous zirconia (b) 3% (c) 5% (d) 10% (e) 20% (f) 25% (g) 30% and (h) 40% boria -zirconia 112 Ammonia TPD profiles of (a) 3% (b) 5% (c) 10% (d) 20% (e) 25% (f) 30% (g) 40% boria -zirconia (calcination temperature 500°C) and (h) 25% boria -zirconia (calcination temperature 650°C) 114 Conversion of indoles over (♦) 3% (■) 5% (▲)... Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 catalysts , Nb2O5 and Zr(OH)4 after drying at ( ) 100°C, ( ) 200°C, and () 300°C 88 The Fischer indole synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole over (♦) hydrous zirconia, and (□) 10% (■) 20% (×) 30% (▲) 40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 87 Fig 3.13 Catalyst leaching test 90 Fig 3.14 Regeneration of 25 wt.% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 91 Fig 4.1 X-ray diffractograms of boria -zirconia catalysts with boria loading from... solid base catalysts 10 Scheme 1.5 Synthesis of ethyleneimine (EI) from monoethanolamine (MEA) 11 Scheme 1.6 Drugs containing indole structures 18 Scheme 1.7 Resonance structures of indole 19 Scheme 1.8 Mechanism of Fischer indole synthesis 20 Scheme 1.9 Fischer indole synthesis via Japp-Klingemann reaction 21 Scheme 1.10 Various routes for synthesis of substituted indole 22 Scheme 1.11 Indole synthesis. .. 3heptanone over (+) niobium oxide, (■) hydrous zirconia, and (×) 10% (□) 20% (▲) 25% (♦) 30% (○) 40% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 82 The Fischer indole reaction of phenylhydrazine with 3heptanone over (■) 25% Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 coppt (×) H-beta (Si/Al = 12.5) (▲) 25% Nb2O5/MCM-41 (♦) 25% xii Nb2O5/Zr(OH)4 82 Fig 3.10 Linear and bulky indole products with molecular dimensions in Å 84 Fig 3.11 Conversion to indole products over. .. synthesis of indole was in 1866 and later in 1883, the Fischer indole synthesis was discovered, which is still the most versatile method for preparing indoles nowadays.[48] Every year, several thousands of indoles and indole derivatives have been synthesized in the research laboratories The sustained interest in indoles is due to their wide range of biological activity.[49] The indole ring structures in... 500°C 100 X-ray diffractograms of 25 wt.% boria zirconia at calcination temperature 100°C, 500°C, and 650°C 100 Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves and pore volume distribution of boria -zirconia catalysts with different boria loadings 105 Nitrogen adsorption/desorption curves and pore volume distribution of 25 wt.% boria -zirconia sample calcined at 100°C, 500°C, and 650°C 106 Infrared spectra of (a)... on zirconia surface, this supported catalyst exhibited activity 10 times higher than that of the original perovskite Zirconia was also found to be a superior support for Re and Rh in the hydrogenation of CO2.[45-47] 1.2 Synthesis of Indoles 1.2.1 Introduction For the last 100 years, the synthesis of indoles and their derivatives have been a research topic of great interest The first synthesis of indole ... the Fischer indole reaction over two different solid acid catalysts, hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide and boria-zirconia catalysts, were investigated Hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide. .. Material 15 1.2 Synthesis of Indoles 18 1.2.1 Introduction 18 1.2.2 Fischer Indole Synthesis 19 1.2.3 Other Methods of Indole Synthesis 21 1.2.4 Catalysts Used in Fischer Indole Synthesis 23 1.3... and temperature programmed desorption of ammonia (NH3 TPD) (3) Catalytic testing of the hydrous zirconia supported niobium oxide catalysts and boria-zirconia catalysts in the Fischer indole synthesis