Issue 1, 2015

Structure–performance relations of molybdenum- and tungsten carbide catalysts for deoxygenation

Abstract

This work demonstrates for the first time that carbide particle size is a critical factor for the activity and stability of carbon supported tungsten- and molybdenum carbide catalysts in (hydro-)deoxygenation reactions. The stability of the catalyst was shown to increase for larger particles due to the improved resistance of the metal carbide phase against full oxidation to crystalline metal oxides under reaction conditions. In addition to the improved catalyst stability, supported molybdenum carbides were found to more than double their weight-based catalytic activity upon increasing carbide particle size from 2 to 10 nanometers. The strongly improved (de-)hydrogenation activity of these larger carbide particles also facilitated a new deoxygenation pathway for fatty acids, in which an initial hydrogenation to fatty-aldehyde is combined with a decarbonylation step. This is the first time in which this deoxygenation pathway is observed over supported tungsten- or molybdenum carbide catalysts.

Graphical abstract: Structure–performance relations of molybdenum- and tungsten carbide catalysts for deoxygenation

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Sep 2014
Accepted
23 Oct 2014
First published
23 Oct 2014

Green Chem., 2015,17, 582-593

Structure–performance relations of molybdenum- and tungsten carbide catalysts for deoxygenation

D. R. Stellwagen and J. H. Bitter, Green Chem., 2015, 17, 582 DOI: 10.1039/C4GC01831A

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