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Pd/Cu-oxide nanoconjugate at zeolite-Y crystallite crafting the mesoporous channels for selective oxidation of benzyl-alcohols

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 05:47 authored by Mukesh Sharma, Biraj Das, Mitu Sharma, Biplab Deka, Young-Bin Park, Suresh BhargavaSuresh Bhargava, Kusum Kumar Bania
Solid-state grinding of palladium and copper salts allowed the growth of palladium/copper oxide interface at the zeolite-Y surface. The hybrid nanostructured material was used as reusable heterogeneous catalyst for selective oxidation of various benzyl alcohols. The large surface area provided by the zeolite-Y matrix highly influenced the catalytic activity, as well as the recyclability of the synthesized catalyst. Impregnation of PdO-CuO nanoparticles on zeolite crystallite leads to the generation of mesoporous channel that probably prevented the leaching of the metal-oxide nanoparticles and endorsed high mass transfer. Formation of mesoporous channel at the external surface of zeolite-Y was evident from transmission electron microscopy and surface area analysis. PdO-CuO nanoparticles were found to be within the range of 2-5 nm. The surface area of PdO-CuO-Y catalyst was found to be much lower than parent zeolite-Y. The decrease in surface area as well as the presence of hysteresis loop in the N 2 -adsoprtion isotherm further suggested successful encapsulation of PdO-CuO nanoparticles via the mesoporous channel formation. The high positive shifting in binding energy in both Pd and Cu was attributed to the influence of zeolite-Y framework on lattice contraction of metal oxides via confinement effect. PdO-CuO-Y catalyst was found to oxidize benzyl alcohol with 99% selectivity. On subjecting to microwave irradiation the same oxidation reaction was found to occur at ambient condition giving same conversion and selectivity.

History

Journal

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces

Volume

9

Issue

40

Start page

35453

End page

35462

Total pages

10

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 American Chemical Society

Former Identifier

2006079201

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-11-06

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