Metal nanoparticles have received intense scientific attention in the field of catalysis. Precise engineering of nanomaterials' size, shape and surface composition, including adsorbed capping ligands, is of utmost importance to control activity and selectivity, and distinguish colloidally prepared metal nanoparticle catalysts from traditional heterogeneous catalysts. The interface between the material and the reaction medium is where the key interactions occur; therefore, catalysis occurs under the influence of capping ligands. In this Perspective review, we focus on the choice of capping ligands (or stabilizing agents), and their role and fate in different steps from preparation to catalysis. Evaluating the influence of the ligands on the catalytic response is not trivial, but the literature provides examples where the ligands adsorbed on the nanoparticle surface dramatically change the activity and selectivity for a particular reaction, while acting either as a dynamic shell or a passivation coating. Steric and electronic effects resulting from the presence of adsorbed ligands have been proposed to influence the catalytic properties. Attempts to remove the capping ligands are discussed, even though they are not always successful or even necessary. Finally, we outline our personal understanding and perspectives on the use of ligands or functionalized supports to tune the activity and selectivity of supported metal nanoparticles.
A comparative study of the promotion effect of weak and strong bases in the aqueous oxidation of benzyl alcohol by Au/TiO2 showed that better conversion and aldehyde selectivity can be obtained using weak bases.
Although rhenium may not be the most common choice of active species in catalysis, it has been reported as a highly active and selective catalyst over a wide range of reactions. Its applications include hydrogenation reactions of great relevance in the field of renewable materials and bio‐derived platform molecules, such as valorization of lignin, CO2, and carboxylic acids. Different from several transition metals, rhenium presents oxidation numbers varying from −3 to +7. Such diversity in the coordination chemistry of rhenium is reflected in the variety of known rhenium compounds, since this metal can form stable structures such as ligand‐bridged multinuclear and organometallic compounds as well as inorganic oxides, metal‐organic frameworks, and clusters. The exceptional flexibility in rhenium speciation yields numerous selective catalysts; however, it also makes the characterization of rhenium catalysts challenging, and its influence on the catalytic activity is not trivial. This review will outline the most established rhenium‐based materials used in hydrogenation catalysis and shed some light on the relation of rhenium species to catalyst selectivity based on advanced characterization techniques. Finally, our perspectives on the use of rhenium catalysts to produce value‐added products will be given.
Despite all the advances in the application of nanoparticle (NP) catalysts, they have received little attention in relation to the hydroformylation reaction. Herein, we present the preparation of a hydroformylation catalyst through the immobilization of air‐stable rhodium NPs onto a magnetic support functionalized with chelating phosphine ligands, which serves as an alternative to air‐sensitive precursors. The catalyst was active in hydroformylation and could be used in successive reactions with negligible metal leaching. The interaction between the rhodium NPs and the diphenylphosphine ligand was evidenced by an enhancement in the Raman spectrum of the ligand. Changes occurred in the Raman spectrum of the catalyst recovered after the reaction, which suggests that the rhodium NPs are precursors of active molecular species that are formed in situ. The supported catalyst was active for successive reactions even after it was exposed to air during the recycling runs and was easily recovered through magnetic separation.
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