Studies on the pathways of the heterogeneous catalytic decarbonylation of lactic acid to acetaldehyde
Abstract
We conducted studies on the pathways of the heterogeneous catalytic decarbonylation of lactic acid (LA) to acetaldehyde (AD) using unsupported NaNO3 and amorphous silica-alumina (SiO2-Al2O3)-based materials by catalytic testing, IR spectroscopic monitoring, temperature-programmed ammonia desorption and the IR spectroscopy of pyridine adsorption. A combination of IR monitoring and catalytic studies illustrated that the catalytic performance was dependent on the content of the in situ-generated lactates and that the interaction of lactates with SiO2-Al2O3 enabled their stabilization against easy dehydration to acrylates and subsequent acrylate polymerization. A combination of IR monitoring, surface acid property and catalytic studies indicated that the AD yield and selectivity to AD increased with decreasing surface acidity. The finding that the ratio of the selectivity to AD to selectivity to acrylic acid almost did not change with varying intrinsic surface acidity indicated that both LA decarbonylation and dehydration were lactate dependent and the catalytic process of LA decarbonylation did not depend on the intrinsic surface acid sites. A probable mechanism of the heterogeneous catalytic LA decarbonylation was proposed, in which the lactates acted as the catalytic active species and physisorbed LA acted both as the Brønsted acid site assisting in the catalysis and as a product intermediate. Besides, the reactivity of LA with SiO2-Al2O3 with regards to the catalytic active species and reaction pathways was discussed.

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