The paper presents a method for the production of 1% platinum catalysts containing oxides of rare-earth elements (REE); it also dwells upon the results of analyzing such catalysts by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), x-ray diffraction analysis (XDA), and thermal analysis (DTA-TGA).
The paper studies the activity of 1 % palladium catalysts containing rare earth oxides (REOs) and alumina as a carrier in the hydrogenation of nitro compounds exemplified by nitrobenzene and o-nitro anisole. Under the liquid-phase hydrogenation conditions, these catalytic systems provide high selectivity of the process and a quantitative yield. It has been found that the partial replacement of Al2O3 with REO allows increasing the hydrogenation rate by 5–6 times, as compared with the reference catalyst and by 1.2–1.7 times as compared with the individual carrier. The oxide mixtures (REO and Al2O3) containing 20–40 % REO allow reaching the same hydrogenation rate with that over an REO-containing 1 % Pd catalyst.
This work is devoted to the study of the activity of 1% platinum catalysts containing rare earth element oxides (OREE) - Gd2O3, Ce2O3 and aluminum oxide as a carrier in the hydrogenation reactions of nitro compounds on the example of n-nitrotoluene. These catalytic systems in the conditions of liquid-phase hydrogenation provide high selectivity of the process and practically quantitative yield. The process was controlled by the potentiometric method, the reaction rate was judged by the amount of hydrogen absorbed per unit time. It is found that 20% and higher aqueous alcohol solutions can be used as a solvent during hydrogenation. It was found that the initial hydrogenation rate for 1% Pt/Gd2O3 is 3.2 times higher, and for 1% Pt/Ce2O3 Cerium it is 1.6 times higher relative to the 1% Pt/Al2O3 comparison catalyst.
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