Issue 17, 2022

Stannate-catalysed glucose–fructose isomerisation in alcohols

Abstract

Isomerisation of glucose to fructose is a crucial step in the valorisation of biomass-derived carbohydrates to renewable chemicals, polymers, and fuels. Glucose isomerisation is base-catalysed but superior catalytic activity can be obtained with Lewis acidic materials such as Sn-beta zeolite, where partially hydrolysed framework Sn-sites, Sn–(OH)x, are considered the catalytically active sites. Alkali-metal stannate salts (MxSnO3·3H2O) contain a similar type of Sn–(OH)x sites in the form of [Sn(OH)6]2− complex anions. In this work, we report the use of M2SnO3·3H2O (M = Na, K) as effective catalysts for glucose–fructose isomerisation in alcohols. Isotope-labelling experiments and kinetic studies demonstrated that the isomerisation with Na2SnO3·3H2O proceeded in methanol by base-catalysis via a proton-transfer mechanism with a low activation energy (63.5 ± 7.0 kJ mol−1). This allowed the stannate to facilitate a higher fructose yield and a higher fructose selectivity than Sn-beta within a shorter reaction time at a lower reaction temperature. Furthermore, in isopropanol and higher alcohols where the stannates are insoluble the reaction proceeded heterogeneously, thus suggesting the catalytic system to be a green and viable alternative to other soluble catalyst systems.

Graphical abstract: Stannate-catalysed glucose–fructose isomerisation in alcohols

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 May 2022
Accepted
19 Jun 2022
First published
20 Jun 2022

Catal. Sci. Technol., 2022,12, 5332-5338

Stannate-catalysed glucose–fructose isomerisation in alcohols

P. Zhu, S. Meier and A. Riisager, Catal. Sci. Technol., 2022, 12, 5332 DOI: 10.1039/D2CY00901C

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