Open Access Article
Sathyapal R. Churipard
ab,
Kempanna S. Kanakikodi
ab,
Jyoti Roy Choudhuric and
Sanjeev P. Maradur
*a
aMaterials Science and Catalysis Division, Poornaprajna Institute of Scientific, Research (PPISR), Bidalur Post, Devanahalli, Bangalore-562164, Karnataka State, India. E-mail: sanjeevpm@poornaprajna.org; Fax: +91 23619034; Tel: +91 80 27408552
bGraduate Studies, Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Manipal – 576104, Karnataka, India
cBMS Institute of Technology and Management, Doddaballapur Main Road, Avalahalli, Yelahanka, Bangalore, Karnataka – 560064, India
First published on 30th September 2020
Selective oxidation of alcohols is an attractive organic transformation and has received tremendous attention from the scientific community over the years. Herein, a mesoporous polymer (MP) was synthesized by a template-free solvothermal approach. The surface of the MP was functionalized with quaternary ammonium groups and polyoxotungstate anion (PW11O397−) was subsequently supported on the MP as a counter anion to the ammonium cation by a simple ion-exchange procedure. The structure of PW11 and PW4 complexes was confirmed by 31P NMR and FTIR analysis. The surface properties of all the catalysts synthesized were explored by various characterization techniques such as nitrogen sorption, TGA, contact angle measurement, and ICP-OES analysis. The synthesized PW11/MP catalysts were employed for selective oxidation of alcohols. Among the various PW11 supported catalysts, PW11/MP (80
:
20) demonstrated excellent catalytic activity for the oxidation of alcohols using aqueous H2O2. The PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst showed good catalytic activity for oxidation of a wide range of alcohols including substituted, heterocyclic and secondary alcohols. The superior catalytic activity of PW11/MP (80
:
20) is attributed to an optimum balance in the hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity in the mesoporous environment, better catalyst wettability, and enrichment of reactants in the catalytic active sites.
On the other hand, polyoxometalates (POM) stands as a versatile catalyst owing to its redox and acidic properties. In particular, Keggin heteropolyacids (HPA) have received significant attention in catalysis which stems from the fact that the acidic and redox properties in this material can be easily tuned by changing their composition and structures. Among the various Keggin heteropolyacids, HPAs with tungsten atoms are extensively studied for catalysis. Nevertheless, the POMs still suffer from limitations such as low surface area, high solubility in polar solvents, lack of recyclability, and reusability which needs to be addressed.38–40
In this context, the conversion of heteropolyacids to neutral salt by the replacement of protons in heteropolyacids by large cations makes it insoluble in many solvents and serves as an efficient heterogeneous POM catalyst. Furthermore, the removal of addenda atom (metal) from Keggin heteropolyanion creates vacancy and generates lacunary Keggin structure which is more potential catalyst in activating various organic substrates than its precursor with saturated anion.41,42
There are several reports on the heterogenization of tungsten-based POMs on high surface area supports.43 Van Bekkum et al. have done pioneering work on MCM-41-supported heteropoly acids.44 Kholdheeva et al. have worked extensively on supported POMs and also reviewed recent trends in the field.45–48 Then several supports such as MOF,49 SBA-15,50 zeolites,51 were used to increase the dispersion, atomic utilization, and the number of accessible active sites of POM.52,53 However, many of the heterogeneous POM catalysts entail complex synthetic procedures and have limitations such as low catalytic activity, tungsten leaching, and low accessibility of active sites to the substrates. Hence, it is obligatory to design the tungsten-based heterogeneous catalyst with a simple synthetic procedure, which offers higher catalytic activity, better catalyst wettability and accessibility of active sites to the reactants.
In this context, mesoporous polymers are potential candidates for the immobilization of various active sites. It shares the property of mesoporous silica and organic framework of a polymer. The pore diameters can be tailored and the organic frameworks can be functionalized through co-polymerization and/or post-synthesis organic reactions.54–59 The hydrophobicity–hydrophilicity in the material can be easily tuned by varying the composition of monomers or by post-synthetic modifications. The effect of substrate wettability on catalytic activity is an important aspect that is overlooked for a long time in heterogeneous catalysis. There are very few reports on the effect of catalyst wettability on catalytic activity. Unlike other catalysts, mesoporous polymers offer better control over tuning the catalyst wettability. Catalyst wettability is one of the key factors in catalysis since it greatly influences the adsorption and desorption of reactants and products and plays a decisive role in enhancing the catalytic activity.60–67 Furthermore, mesoporous polymer have diverse synthetic routes that facilitate the incorporation of several chemical functionalities and offer significant advantages than conventional porous materials. These promising features of mesoporous polymer make it a potential candidate for heterogeneous catalysis.68–71
In the present study, we have synthesized polyoxotungstate immobilized mesoporous polymer (PW11/MP) by template-free solvothermal approach. The catalytic activity of the PW11/MP catalyst was evaluated for the green oxidation benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde using H2O2. Additionally, the catalytic application of the PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst was extended to a wide range of alcohol substrates. The concentration of quaternary functional groups in the material was varied to investigate the effect of hydrophilic environment on the substrate wettability and catalytic activity. The optimum hydrophobic–hydrophilic environment helps to provide better catalyst wettability for the oxidation of hydrophobic benzyl alcohol with aqueous H2O2. Herein, we have demonstrated the superior role of catalyst wettability than other physicochemical properties of catalyst in enhancing the catalytic activity.
O bond, this characteristic peak was also observed in PW11 supported catalysts which confirms the successful incorporation of polyoxotungstate complex in the mesoporous polymer as well as in other supports.72 The peaks observed at 1605, 2960 and 2850 cm−1 in the MP and PW11/MP correspond to C
C, CH2, and C–H bonds of the polymeric support respectively. The band around 676 cm−1 in unmodified MP polymer is attributed to the stretching vibration of C–Cl bond which is found to be absent in the polyoxotungstate supported mesoporous polymers which confirms the successful quaternization of mesoporous polymers by trimethylamine. For clarity we have also subtracted the FTIR spectrum of PW11/MP (80
:
20) with the quarternary ammonium functionalised mesoporous polymer in the NO3− form without PW11 loading to distinguish the peaks corresponding to PW11 complex in the PW11 supported MP catalyst (ESI Fig. S1 and S2†).
FT-IR spectrum of the PW4 complex revealed the presence of a characteristic peak at 870 cm−1 which is attributed to O–O bond of the peroxo group (ESI Fig. S3†). The peak at 591 and 523 cm−1 is assigned to W–O2 which is a vibration of a typical peroxotungstate complex (PW4).26 These characteristic peaks of peroxotungstate (PW4) complex were found absent in the lacunary Keggin polyoxotungstate (PW11) complex which distinguishes the structural difference between the two complexes.
The thermal stability of the polymeric catalyst was investigated by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) (ESI Fig. S4†). TGA analysis was performed at a ramp rate of 10 °C min−1 under a flow of nitrogen. The PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst showed a multistage decomposition from 30 to 800 °C. The initial weight loss of 3 wt% in PW11/MP (80
:
20) polymer below 100 °C is attributed to the desorption of physisorbed water molecules. The weight loss from 200 °C to 250 °C is possibly due to the decomposition of quaternary ammonium groups. The third step of weight loss is observed from 370–470 °C which is attributed to the destruction of the polymeric framework in the catalysts.73,74 This confirms that the catalyst is stable up to 200 °C.
The physicochemical properties of various catalysts are summarized in Tables 1 and S1.† The porous properties of all the catalysts were determined by nitrogen sorption measurements. All the MP polymers and PW11/MP catalysts displayed typical type IV isotherm (ESI Fig. S5†) which is a characteristic property of mesoporous materials. The total surface area reduced drastically upon increasing the molar ratio of vinylbenzyl chloride in the polymer (Table 1). The MP polymer with 20 mol% of vinylbenzyl chloride is the threshold limit for retaining the mesoporosity in the polymer, beyond which the porosity of the polymer is lost and the material becomes nonporous. All the polymers showed a BJH pore size of 13.9 nm except PW11/MP (70
:
30) which was nonporous (ESI Fig. S6†). The recycled PW11/MP catalyst was also characterized to check the stability of the porous structure in the reaction conditions. The analysis showed that the material retained its mesoporosity with a slight decrease in the surface area even after five recycles (ESI Table S1†). Polyoxotungstate supported catalysts were also characterized by ICP-OES to determine the amount of tungsten loaded in each catalyst (Table 1). The tungsten loading was in the range of 0.0867 to 0.1556 mmol g−1 of mesoporous polymer catalyst. The data suggests that with an increase in the amount of vinylbenzyl chloride in polymer, there is an increase in tungsten loading in the catalyst.
The structural integrity of the prepared PW11 complex and PW11 supported mesoporous polymer were confirmed by 31P MAS NMR analysis which is the most reliable technique so far in elucidating the structure of polyoxotungstates (Fig. 2). The PW11 complex showed a characteristic peak at −12.7 ppm which is ascribed to the lacunary Keggin-type structure of [PW11O39]7−complex.75 The PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst exhibited a strong resonance peak at −14.7 ppm, which is attributed to the PW11 complex in the new environment of the quaternary ammonium functionalized mesoporous polymer.52,76 The shift in 31P MAS NMR signal from −12.7 to −14.7 ppm of PW11/MP (80
:
20) could be due to the strong interaction between the PW11 complex and the polymeric support or due to the hydration or protonation of the PW11 anion.49,77
The 5 times recycled PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst also exhibited the characteristic resonance peak at −14.7 ppm similar to that of fresh PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst which confirms that the catalyst is stable in the reaction conditions. It is rather unusual that PW11 complex retaining the structure after catalysis. The PW11 complex will undergo decomposition in the presence of excess of H2O2.
For comparison of the structure of the PW11 complex, we also synthesized the tetranuclear peroxotungstate complex (PW4) and confirmed its structure by characterization. The structure of the tetranuclear peroxotungstate (PW4) complex is confirmed by 31P NMR analysis. The 31P NMR analysis of the PW4 complex showed a resonance peak at +7.1 ppm which suggests that the synthesized complex has a tetranuclear peroxotungstate (PW4) structure (ESI Fig. S7†).
To understand the role of catalyst wettability of PW11/MP catalysts, contact angle measurement was performed (Fig. 3). PW11/MP (90
:
10) displayed a contact angle of 120° for 30% H2O2 whereas PW11/MP (80
:
20) and PW11/MP (70
:
30) showed a lower contact angle of 107° and 82° respectively. This indicates that PW11/MP (70
:
30) exhibits higher wettability for H2O2 than PW11/MP (90
:
10) and PW11/MP (80
:
20). Since benzyl alcohol was passing through the pellet of PW11/MP catalysts, the contact angle of benzyl alcohol on the PW11/MP catalyst could not be measured.
![]() | ||
Fig. 3 Contact angle of H2O2 droplet on: (a) PW11/MP (90 : 10), (b) PW11/MP (80 : 20) and (c) PW11/MP (70 : 30). | ||
However, the catalyst wettability of PW11/MP catalysts for benzyl alcohol was measured in terms of its adsorption capacity (ESI Table S2†). The adsorption capacity of benzyl alcohol was measured for all PW11/MP catalysts. PW11/MP (90
:
10) catalyst showed the highest adsorption capacity of 4.2 times, whereas PW11/MP (80
:
20) and PW11/MP (70
:
30) showed adsorption capacity of 2.2 and 1.7 times respectively. This confirms that PW11/MP (90
:
10) exhibits higher wettability for benzyl alcohol. On the other hand, the PW11/MP (80
:
20) offers a good wettability for both the reactants thereby leading to enhanced catalytic activity without any competitive diffusion of reactants to the catalytic active sites in the polymeric matrix.
In the current synthetic approach of the PW11 complex, the pH of the solution during the synthesis was found to be high (pH = 7) and the quaternary ammonium salt used was tetrabutylammonium bromide which has favoured the formation of monolacunary Keggin structure (PW11). Whereas the pH during the synthesis of tetranuclear peroxotungstate complex was low (pH = 1) and we have employed methyltrioctylammonium chloride which has resulted in the tetranuclear peroxotungstate (PW4) complex. The structures of both complexes were confirmed by 31P NMR and FTIR analysis.
| Catalyst | Benzyl alcohol conversion (wt%) | Benzaldehyde selectivity (wt%) |
|---|---|---|
| a Reaction conditions: benzyl alcohol = 20 mmol, H2O2 = 30 mmol, catalyst = 10 wt% w.r.t alcohol, temperature = 90 °C, reaction time = 6 h.b In the absence catalyst.c In the absence ofH2O2.d In the presence of unmodified MP and H2O2. | ||
| Blank 1b | Traces | Traces |
| Blank 2c | Traces | Traces |
| Blank 3d | Traces | Traces |
| PW11 | 95.0 | 78.2 |
PW11/MP (90 : 10) |
85.5 | 67.5 |
PW11/MP (80 : 20) |
94.2 | 69.8 |
PW11/MP (70 : 30) |
85.5 | 67.6 |
| PW11/KIT-6 | 10.7 | 37.6 |
| PW11/Amberlite IRA 900 | 66.3 | 74.8 |
Among all the catalysts screened, PW11 complex (homogeneous), and the PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst showed the best catalytic activities. PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst retained the catalytic activity of the PW11 complex even after heterogenization and exhibited the highest conversion (94.2%) with 69.8% benzaldehyde selectivity (Table 2). The superior catalytic activity of the PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst is attributed to the optimum amount of active sites distributed in the mesoporous environment and better wettability of catalyst for both the reactants.34,62
Despite higher tungsten loading (0.1556 mmol g−1), the PW11/MP (70
:
30) catalyst showed lower conversion and selectivity. This may be due to the non-porous nature of the catalyst and lower wettability for the hydrophobic alcohol substrate on the catalyst surface. PW11/Amberlite showed a lower yield of benzaldehyde which is possibly due to the lower surface area of the catalyst (ESI Table S1†). PW11/KIT-6 catalyst has higher surface area but showed lower catalytic activity, which could be attributed to the lower wettability and lower accessibility of active sites to the reactants. Hence, PW11/MP (80
:
20) was selected as the best catalyst for further screening and optimization of reaction conditions.
To identify the unique properties of the PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst, benzyl alcohol oxidation was done with all PW11/MP catalysts with identical amounts of tungsten (ESI Table S3†). Despite having high surface area PW11/MP (90
:
10) catalyst was less active as compared to PW11/MP (80
:
20). Similarly, PW11/MP (70
:
30) catalyst also gave a low yield of benzaldehyde. Hence, these findings suggest that catalyst wettability is playing a major role in this catalyst than high surface area and the presence of optimum active sites.
:
1 was found to be optimum and selected for further studies.
| Catalyst | H2O2/BzOH | Benzyl alcohol conv. (wt%) | Benzaldehyde selec. (wt%) |
|---|---|---|---|
a Reaction conditions: benzyl alcohol = 20 mmol, catalyst = PW11/MP (80 : 20) 10wt% w.r.t. benzyl alcohol, reaction temperature = 90 °C, reaction time = 6 h. |
|||
PW11/MP (80 : 20) |
1.5 | 94.2 | 69.8 |
PW11/MP (80 : 20) |
1.2 | 94.2 | 74.1 |
PW11/MP (80 : 20) |
1.0 | 87.9 | 81.6 |
:
20) catalyst (ESI Fig. S8†). The results indicate that the catalyst is highly active and showed more than 74% benzyl alcohol conversion with 86% benzaldehyde selectivity in the initial 3 h. With the increase in time, the benzyl alcohol conversion increased to 87%. However, the selectivity to benzaldehyde slightly decreased after 6 h. This is possibly due to the over oxidation of benzaldehyde to benzoic acid during prolonged reaction time.81
:
20) catalyst (Fig. 5). As the temperature was increased from 70–90 °C, the yield of benzaldehyde has significantly improved but further increasing the temperature beyond 90 °C shows less benzaldehyde yield. This could be possibly due to the fast decomposition of H2O2 at higher temperatures. Hence, 90 °C was selected as the optimum temperature for further studies. This suggests that temperature can increase the benzyl alcohol conversion but it does not influence the benzaldehyde selectivity.82
:
20) catalyst acts as green heterogeneous catalysts for triphasic oxidation of benzyl alcohol on water.
:
20) catalyst under optimized reaction conditions to check the stability of catalyst under the reaction conditions (Fig. 7). After each run, the catalyst was filtered, washed with an excess of methanol and acetone to remove the adsorbed reactants or products.
![]() | ||
Fig. 7 Catalyst reusability test. Reaction conditions: benzyl alcohol = 20 mmol, H2O2 = 20 mmol, catalyst = PW11/MP (80 : 20) 10 wt% (w.r.t benzyl alcohol), temperature = 90 °C, reaction time = 6 h. | ||
It was dried at 70 °C for 3 h and used for the next run. PW11/MP (80
:
20) showed good recyclability and retained its catalytic activity up to 5 recycles without significant loss in its catalytic activity. This proves that the catalyst is truly heterogeneous and can be used for several recycles without loss in its catalytic activity.
Leaching study was performed to check the stability of the PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst towards the leaching of the active species (PW11). The reaction was stopped after 1 h and the catalyst was separated from the reaction mixture by filtration. The reaction was then allowed to proceed further without the catalyst. There was almost no change in the benzyl alcohol conversion after removal of the catalyst from the reaction medium which confirms the heterogeneous nature of the PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst (Fig. 8). Further, the reaction mixture was subjected to ICP-OES analysis to estimate the amount of tungsten leached in the solution. The ICP-OES data showed that there is no detectable amount of tungsten in the filtered reaction solution which confirms that there is no leaching of PW11 active species from the catalyst (ESI Table S1†).
![]() | ||
Fig. 8 Leaching studies. Reaction conditions: benzyl alcohol = 20 mmol, H2O2 = 20 mmol, catalyst = PW11/MP (80 : 20) 10 wt% (w.r.t benzyl alcohol), temperature = 90 °C. | ||
:
20) catalyst was employed for the oxidation of various alcohols including primary, secondary, and heterocyclic alcohols. PW11/MP (80
:
20) showed high catalytic activity for oxidation of primary, secondary, and substituted alcohols (Table 4).
| Alcohol substrate | Alcohol:H2O2 | Alcohol conv. (wt%) | Product selec. (wt%) |
|---|---|---|---|
a Reaction conditions: alcohol = 20 mmol, catalyst = PW11/MP (80 : 20) 10 wt% w.r.t alcohol, temperature = 90 °C, reaction time = 6 h.b 6 ml of acetonitrile was used as solvent.c Reaction time 18 h. |
|||
| Benzyl alcohol | 1 : 1 |
87.9 | 81.6 |
| 4-Hydroxy benzyl alcoholb | 1 : 1 |
81.1 | 68.0 |
| Cyclohexanol | 1 : 2 |
74.2 | 100.0 |
| 4-Chlorobenzyl alcoholb | 1 : 2 |
72.9 | 86.2 |
| 4-Methoxy benzyl alcoholb | 1 : 2 |
82.0 | 67.2 |
| 3-Phenoxy benzyl alcoholb,c | 1 : 2 |
67.6 | 89.2 |
| 1-Hexanolb,c | 1 : 1 |
6.3 | 100.0 |
| 1-Octanolb,c | 1 : 1 |
7.5 | 100.0 |
| Pyridine methanolb | 1 : 1 |
49.1 | 89.4 |
High yield of corresponding carbonyl compounds was obtained in 6 h for the oxidation of benzyl alcohol, 4-hydroxy benzyl alcohol, 4-chloro benzyl alcohol, and 4-methoxy benzyl alcohol. Whereas for non-activated cyclohexanol and bulky group substituted alcohol like phenoxy benzyl alcohol took longer reaction time (18 h) to get a high yield. Heterocyclic alcohol (pyridine methanol) and aliphatic alcohols showed lower yield compared to other alcohol substrates.
:
20) catalyst was compared with that of the fresh catalyst (Fig. 9). The recycled catalyst showed a characteristic peak at 975 cm−1 which corresponds to the W
O bond. Polyoxotungstate functionalized polymer has retained all the characteristic peaks of the polyoxotungstate complex. The 5 times recycled catalyst was also characterized by ICP-OES analysis. It showed almost similar amount of tungsten as the fresh catalyst, this confirms that there is no leaching of tungsten in the reaction medium (ESI Table S1†). The results of FTIR and ICP-OES reveal that the catalyst is stable under the reaction conditions and the polyoxotungstate complex is intact in the mesoporous polymer even after 5 recycles.
:
20) showed high catalytic activity compared to all other PW11 supported catalysts screened. The reaction conditions were optimized to get a high yield of targeted products. High yield of benzaldehyde was obtained for the oxidation of benzyl alcohol when water was used as a solvent, this shed light on better wettability of the reactants in PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst. The high catalytic performance of PW11/MP (80
:
20) is attributed to the better dispersion of the optimum number of active sites (PW11) in mesopores and proper balance between the hydrophobic and hydrophilic surface in the catalyst. PW11/MP (80
:
20) catalyst was stable and retained its catalytic activity up to 5 recycles. These promising features of PW11/MP (80
:
20) make it an efficient catalyst for the selective oxidation of a wide range of alcohols using green oxidant (H2O2).
:
10, 80
:
20, and 70
:
30) was synthesized solvothermally by free radical polymerization of divinylbenzene and vinylbenzyl chloride monomers. Wherein, (90
:
10, 80
:
20, and 70
:
30) indicates the molar ratio between the divinylbenzene and vinylbenzyl chloride in the co-polymer synthesised. In a typical synthesis, 3.125 g of DVB and 0.9157 g of VBC were added to the solution containing 40 ml THF, 0.1 g of AIBN radical initiator, and 4 g of water. The above solution as stirred at room temperature for 3 h, then transferred to autoclave and hydrothermally treated at 100 °C for 48 h to get mesoporous polymer MP (80
:
20), where 80
:
20 is the molar ratio of PDVB to VBC. Similarly, mesoporous polymers MP (70
:
30) and MP (90
:
10) were synthesized by varying mole ratios of DVB to VBC.In this synthetic approach, the solvent used in the synthesis itself acts as a porogen and creates mesoporosity in the polymer without the aid of external templates.84 This unique feature of solvothermal polymerization is more desirable as it eliminates the use of templates and subsequent template removing process.
For comparison, we have synthesized tetranuclear peroxotungstate complex (PW4) following the previously reported procedure (ESI Section 1†).26
For comparison, KIT-6 was synthesized according to the reported procedure.85 Prior to the functionalization of KIT-6 with trimethylamine, it was silylated using chloropropyl trimethoxy silane following the reported procedure.86 The amine-functionalized KIT-6 and Amberlite IRA 900 were supported with PW11complex using the same ion-exchange procedure as the PW11/MP catalyst.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d0ra07178a |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020 |