Highly Selective Production of Acrylic Acid from Glycerol via Two Steps Using Au/CeO2 Catalysts

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Using biomass resources for chemical production can provide more sustainable development in the chemical industry. In this work, acrylic acid was selectively produced from glycerol via two steps: Glycerol was efficiently converted to allyl alcohol by formic acid-mediated deoxydehy-dration (DODH), and then, the obtained ally' alcohol was oxidized without purification into acrylic acid in a basic aqueous solution. The Au/CeO2 catalysts were used for the selective oxidation, and it worked well even in the presence of residual formic acid and impurities. A high yield of 87% was obtained for the production of acrylic acid from glycerol: 94.5% from glycerol to allyl alcohol and 92% from allyl alcohol to acrylic acid. The different shapes of CeO2 such as rods, octahedra, and cubes were used as supports to deposit the Au active phase. Au deposited on octahedral CeO2 presented the highest yield toward acrylic acid, and it was the most stable for the repeated oxidations. The effects of reaction time, temperature, O-2 pressure, and ally' alcohol concentration were evaluated to maximize the yield toward acrylic acid.
Publisher
ACS Publications
Issue Date
2017-12
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

GAS SHIFT REACTION; ALLYL ALCOHOL; CRYSTAL-PLANE; CERIA CATALYSTS; OXIDATION; DEOXYDEHYDRATION; DEHYDRATION; METHANOL; SHAPE; NANOSHAPES

Citation

ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering, v.5, no.12, pp.11371 - 11376

ISSN
2168-0485
DOI
10.1021/acssuschemeng.7b02457
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/237684
Appears in Collection
CBE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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