Nitrogen-modified activated carbon supported bimetallic gold–cesium(i) as highly active and stable catalyst for the hydrochlorination of acetylene
Abstract
In the challenging acetylene hydrochlorination to vinyl chloride over Au-based catalysts, Au–CsI catalysts are substantially more active and stable than their monometallic counterparts. Here we describe a novel nitrogen-modified activated carbon supported Au–CsI catalyst (1Au4CsI/NAC) that delivers stable performance for acetylene conversion reaching 90.1% and there was only 1.5% C2H2 conversion loss after 50 h under the reaction conditions of C2H2 hourly space velocity 1480 h−1. After a careful characterization of all the catalysts, we concluded that the nitrogen atoms’ influence on the stability of the Au–CsI catalysts correlates with the strengthening of the adsorption of hydrogen chloride to the catalyst and consequently inhibits Au3+ reduction under the reaction conditions.