Title
The Reaction of Alkynes with Model Gold Catalysts: Generation of Acetylides, Self-coupling and Surface Decomposition
Date Issued
01 January 2022
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Springer
Abstract
Alkynes are one of the most important groups of building blocks in organic chemistry as they work as nucleophiles upon deprotonation of its acidic hydrogen. On the surface of a gold catalyst the reactivity of an alkyne towards dehydrogenation depends on the stability of the resulting acetylide species and on its Brønsted acidic behavior with respect to other species in the system. Herein, we study the reaction of alkynes on an oxygen-covered gold surface, hereafter described as O/Au, with and without species able to build acid–base pairs on the surface. As expected, alkynes undergo a facile dehydrogenation process, forming acetylide species and coupling products such as CH3–CC–CC–CH3 from propyne (CH3–CC–H). However, temperature-programmed reactions show that the catalytic intermediates are strongly attached to the surface, leading to parallel decomposition pathways that result in the carbon poisoning of the catalyst. The strong attachment suggests that the alkynes can displace species known to undergo facile dehydrogenation on gold, such as adsorbed alkoxy, as demonstrated by experiments using selected alcohols and alkynes. Moreover, alkynes can even displace alcohols of similar molecular weight (acetylene vs. methanol; phenylacetylene vs. phenol). The results indicate that a gold catalyst facilitates the formation of acetylide species and coupling products, even though their strong interaction with the surface may be counterproductive, as it results in their decomposition. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Química
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85122372259
Source
Catalysis Letters
ISSN of the container
1011372X
Sponsor(s)
Funding text
This work was funded by UTEC Faculty Grant No. 819051 to promote international exploratory collaborative research with Harvard University. EM acknowledges the Ito Foundation for International Education Exchange for financial support. IMASC (Harvard) is acknowledged for partial support.
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