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  • Carbon-embedded Ni nanocatalysts derived from MOFs by a sacrificial template method for efficient hydrogenation of furfural to tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol

    Author(s)
    Su, Yanping
    Chen, Chun
    Zhu, Xiaoguang
    Zhang, Yong
    Gong, Wanbing
    Zhang, Haimin
    Zhao, Huijun
    Wang, Guozhong
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Zhao, Huijun
    Year published
    2017
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    Abstract
    We report a fast and simple method for the synthesis of Ni-based metal–organic-frameworks (Ni-MOFs). Due to the existence of nickel ions and an organic ligand, the MOFs are employed as a sacrificial template for the facile preparation of carbon-embedded Ni (Ni/C) catalysts by a direct thermal decomposition method. The obtained Ni/C catalysts exhibit excellent catalytic activity for selectively transforming furfural (FAL) to tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol (THFOL) due to the Ni nanoparticles (NPs) embedded uniformly in the ligand-derived carbon. The exemplified results illustrate that the catalytic performance of the Ni/C catalyst ...
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    We report a fast and simple method for the synthesis of Ni-based metal–organic-frameworks (Ni-MOFs). Due to the existence of nickel ions and an organic ligand, the MOFs are employed as a sacrificial template for the facile preparation of carbon-embedded Ni (Ni/C) catalysts by a direct thermal decomposition method. The obtained Ni/C catalysts exhibit excellent catalytic activity for selectively transforming furfural (FAL) to tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol (THFOL) due to the Ni nanoparticles (NPs) embedded uniformly in the ligand-derived carbon. The exemplified results illustrate that the catalytic performance of the Ni/C catalyst is greatly affected by the calcination conditions (temperature and time), composition of the Ni-MOF precursor and the catalysis conditions. The conversion of FAL and selectivity of THFOL both reached 100% under the conditions of 120 °C, 1 MPa H2 pressure and 120 min of hydrogenation over the Ni/C-500 catalyst, derived from the pyrolysis of Ni-MOFs (Ni : BTC mole ratio of 1.0) at 500 °C for 120 min, which exhibits an average nanoparticle size of ∼14 nm and uniform dispersion, and the highest BET surface area (∼92 m2 g−1) among all investigated Ni/C catalysts. This facilely prepared heterogeneous catalyst would be very promising for the replacement of noble metal catalysts for the efficient catalytic conversion of biomass-derived feedstocks into value-added chemicals.
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    Journal Title
    Dalton Transactions
    Volume
    46
    Issue
    19
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1039/c7dt00628d
    Subject
    Inorganic chemistry
    Theoretical and computational chemistry
    Other chemical sciences
    Other chemical sciences not elsewhere classified
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/348099
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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