Building Porous Ni(Salen)‐Based Catalysts from Waste Styrofoam via Autocatalytic Coupling Chemistry for Heterogeneous Oxidation with Molecular Oxygen

Author:

Wan Shuocheng1,Zou Qingyang1,Zhu Jiawen1,Luo Huimin1,Li Yuqiang1,Abu‐Reziq Raed2,Tang Juntao1,Tang Ruiren1,Pan Chunyue1,Zhang Chunyan3,Yu Guipeng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Hunan Key Laboratory of Micro and Nano Materials Interface Science College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Central South University Changsha 410083 China

2. Institute of Chemistry Casali Center of Applied Chemistry The Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Jerusalem 91904 Israel

3. School of Chemical and Environment Engineering Hunan Institute of Technology Hengyang 421002 China

Abstract

AbstractThe development of robust and industrially viable catalysts from plastic waste is of great significance, and the facile construction of high performance heterogeneous catalyst systems for phenol–quinone conversions remains a grand challenge. Herein, a feasible strategy is demonstrated to reclaim Styrofoam into hierarchically porous nickel–salen–loaded hypercrosslinked polystyrene (PS@Ni–salen) catalysts with high activities through an unusual autocatalytic coupling route. The salen is immobilized onto PS chain by Friedel–Crafts alkylation of benzyl chloride derivatives, and the generated hydrogen chloride coordinately promotes the simultaneous crosslinking and bridge formation between aromatic rings via a Scholl coupling route, leading to hierarchically porous networks. After the metallization with Ni, the resultant networks exhibit high catalytic activity for the oxidation of 2,3,6‐trimethylphenol to 2,3,5‐trimethyl‐1,4‐benzoquinone under mild conditions (303 K, 1 bar of O2). This catalyst also demonstrates attractive recycling performance without an obvious loss of catalytic efficiency over five consecutive cycles. This methodology might provide a potential sustainable alternative to construct environmentally benign and cost‐effective catalysts for specific organic transformation.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Polymers and Plastics,Organic Chemistry

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