Applied Catalysis A: General, Vol.523, 85-91, 2016
Transformation of methyl laurate into lauryl alcohol over a Ru-Sn-Mo/C catalyst by using zerovalent iron and water as an in situ hydrogen source
Hydrogenation and hydrogenolysis reactions, which are used in the chemical industry for the synthesis of organic compounds, are very expensive operations because of the need for facilities that can liquefy, transport, and store the hydrogen produced through steam reforming of natural gas. We have therefore developed a novel approach for hydrogenation that does not require the use of high-cost facilities. Using this, zerovalent iron (Fe) and water (H2O) are introduced as an in situ hydrogen donor system for the transformation of methyl laurate into lauryl alcohol over a Ru-based catalyst. This combination of a Ru-Sn-Mo/C catalyst with a Fe/H2O system showed significantly higher transformation rates for the conversion of methyl laurate into lauryl alcohol than a conventional reaction system that uses pressurized hydrogen. The reason for this is that the new system produces lauric acid as an intermediate during the reaction, which is more efficiently hydrogenized into lauryl alcohol over the Ru-Sn-Mo/C catalyst. The Fe/H2O system played two important roles: a hydrogen source for the hydrogenation reaction and a catalyst for the generation of lauric acid by methyl laurate hydrolysis. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.