3 resultados para ACID CATALYSTS
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
This work deals with a comparison of the catalytic behavior of several heterogeneous acid catalysts in the direct hydrolysis of an untreated softwood dust. Amongst the various catalysts investigated, some were characterized by relatively high yield to monosaccharides, such as a Zirconium phosphate and the reference Amberlyst 15. Conversely, some catalyst types, ie, Sn/W mixed oxide and Zirconia-grafted trifluoromethanesulphonic acid, were selective into glucose, since sugars derived from hemicellulose dissolution and hydrolysis were rapidly degraded. A detailed analysis of the reactivity of Zr/P/O was pursued, in the hydrolysis of both untreated and ball-milled microcrystalline cellulose; at 150°C and 3h reaction time, the catalyst gave high selectivity to glucose, with negligible formation of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural, and moderate cellulose conversion. After ball-milling of the cellulose, a remarkable increase of conversion was achieved, still with a high selectivity to glucose and very low formation of degradation compounds. The catalyst showed high affinity for β-1,4-glucans, as demonstrated by the activity in cellobiose hydrolysis into glucose.
Resumo:
Upgrade of hydrogen to valuable fuel is a central topic in modern research due to its high availability and low price. For the difficulties in hydrogen storage, different pathways are still under investigation. A promising way is in the liquid-phase chemical hydrogen storage materials, because they can lead to greener transformation processes with the on line development of hydrogen for fuel cells. The aim of my work was the optimization of catalysts for the decomposition of formic acid made by sol immobilisation method (a typical colloidal method). Formic acid was selected because of the following features: it is a versatile renewable reagent for green synthesis studies. The first aim of my research was the synthesis and optimisation of Pd nanoparticles by sol-immobilisation to achieve better catalytic performances and investigate the effect of particle size, oxidation state, role of stabiliser and nature of the support. Palladium was chosen because it is a well-known active metal for the catalytic decomposition of formic acid. Noble metal nanoparticles of palladium were immobilized on carbon charcoal and on titania. In the second part the catalytic performance of the “homemade” catalyst Pd/C to a commercial Pd/C and the effect of different monometallic and bimetallic systems (AuxPdy) in the catalytic formic acid decomposition was investigated. The training period for the production of this work was carried out at the University of Cardiff (Group of Dr. N. Dimitratos).
Resumo:
Preparations of heterogeneous catalysts are usually complex processes that involve several procedures as precipitation, crystallization and hydrothermal treatments. This processes are really dependent by the operative conditions such as temperature, pH, concentration etc. Hence the resulting product is extremely affected by any possible variations in these parameters making this synthesis really fragile. With the aim to improve these operations has been decided to exploit a new possible strong environment-respectful process by mechanochemical treatment, which permits to carry out solvent free-solvent synthesis exploiting the Mixer Mill MM400 (Retsch) in order to have reproducible results. Two different systems have been studied in this kind of synthesis: a tin β -zeolite tested in a H-trasnfer reaction of cyclohexanone and a silver on titania catalyst used in the fluorination of 2,2 dimethyl glucaric acid. Each catalyst has been characterized by different techniques in order to understand the transformations involved in the mechanochemical treatment.