Title of article
Origin of the selectivity in the gold-mediated oxidation of benzyl alcohol
Author/Authors
Rodrيguez-Reyes، نويسنده , , Juan Carlos F. and Friend، نويسنده , , Cynthia M. and Madix، نويسنده , , Robert J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
6
From page
1129
To page
1134
Abstract
Benzyl alcohol has received substantial attention as a probe molecule to test the selectivity and efficiency of novel metallic gold catalysts. Herein, the mechanisms of benzyl alcohol oxidation on a gold surface covered with atomic oxygen are elucidated; the results show direct correspondence to the reaction on gold-based catalysts. The selective, partial oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde is achieved with low oxygen surface concentrations and takes place through dehydrogenation of the alcohol to form benzaldehyde via a benzyloxy (C6H5–CH2O) intermediate. While in this case atomic oxygen plays solely a dehydrogenating role, at higher concentrations it leads to the formation of intermediates from benzaldehyde, producing benzoic acid and CO2. Facile ester (benzyl benzoate) formation also occurs at low oxygen concentrations, which indicates that benzoic acid is not a precursor of further oxidation of the ester; instead, the ester is produced by the coupling of adsorbed benzyloxy and benzaldehyde. Key to the high selectivity seen at low oxygen concentrations is the fact that the production of the aldehyde (and esters) is kinetically favored over the production of benzoic acid.
Keywords
Oxidation , alcohols , Catalysis , Gold
Journal title
Surface Science
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Surface Science
Record number
1686564
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