Accelerated Selective Oxidation of Benzyl Alcohol to Benzaldehyde Via a Self-Catalyzed Pickering Emulsion Microreactor

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A(2024)

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Abstract
Selective oxidation of alcohols to aldehyde or ketone is a fundamental reaction in organic synthesis. Herein, a self-catalyzed Pickering emulsion microreactor (PEM) was designed for the selective oxidation of benzyl alcohol (BzOH) to benzaldehyde (BzH) using peroxymonosulfate (PMS) as an oxidant. Featuring inherent pyridinic N and pyridine N-oxide species, Enteromorpha prolifera-derived biochar displayed particular super-amphiphilicity, able to serve as an emulsifier and catalyst simultaneously in the PMS-based PEM (PPEM) system. The results showed that, without extra additives, the PPEM system could 100% selectively oxidize 2.88 mM of BzOH to BzH (yield: 90.4%) within 30 min at room temperature. After systematic and theoretical studies, we found that radical (O-2(center dot)-) and non-radical (O-1(2) and mediated electron transfer) oxidation routes were responsible for the selective BzOH oxidation to BzH, where the reaction energy barrier for the oxidation of BzOH by O-1(2) (18.0 kcal mol(-1)) is lower compared to that of O-2(center dot)- (25.8 kcal mol(-1)). Overall, the rationally fabricated biochar with special surface wettability and catalytic activity offers a novel emulsion self-catalysis route to achieve the selective oxidation of alcohol.
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