Oxygen vacancy engineering of Ru/MnOx to enhance water-assisted proton hopping for phenol hydrodeoxygenation
Abstract
The catalytic conversion of lignin-derived phenols to their corresponding aliphatic alcohols constitutes a pivotal industrial process for generating polymer precursors, including ketones, carboxylic acids, and amine derivatives. In this study, three kinds of manganese oxides (MnO2, Mn2O3, and Mn3O4) were synthesized through a facile hydrothermal or precipitation method, followed by Ru nanoparticle deposition and applied to selective hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) of lignin-derived phenol to cyclohexanol in the aqueous phase. Among the three Ru/MnOx catalysts, Ru/MnO2 showed the highest catalytic activity for HDO of phenol. Complete phenol conversion (100%) and 99% cyclohexanol selectivity were achieved under mild aqueous-phase conditions (1 MPa H2, 343 K for 3 h), surpassing those of their Mn2O3- and Mn3O4-supported counterparts. According to the characterization results of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and temperature-programmed reduction of hydrogen (H2-TPR), more surface oxygen vacancies on Ru/MnO2 favored the adsorption of water, which assisted the proton hopping across the surface of MnO2, enhancing hydrogenation activity.