Abstract
AbstractThe removal of acetylene from ethylene streams is key in industry for manufacturing polyethylene. Here we show that a well-defined Pd1–Au1 dimer, anchored to the walls of a metal–organic framework (MOF), catalyses the selective semihydrogenation of acetylene to ethylene with ≥99.99% conversion (≤1 ppm of acetylene) and >90% selectivity in extremely rich ethylene streams (1% acetylene, 89% ethylene, 10% H2, simulated industrial front-end reaction conditions). The reaction proceeds with an apparent activation energy of ∼1 kcal mol–1, working even at 35 °C, and with operational windows (>100 °C) and weight hourly space velocities ($$66{,}000\,{\mathrm{ml}}\,{\mathrm{g}}^{-1}_{\mathrm{cat}}\,{\mathrm{h}}^{-1}$$
66
,
000
ml
g
cat
−
1
h
−
1
) within industrial specifications. A combined experimental and computational mechanistic study shows the cooperativity between both atoms, and between atoms and support, to enable the barrierless semihydrogenation of acetylene.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
9 articles.
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