Nickel promotes selective ethylene epoxidation on silver
University of California, Santa Barbara · Tufts University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Over the last 80 years, chlorine (Cl) has been the primary promoter of the ethylene epoxidation reaction valued at ~40 billion USD per year, providing a ~25% selectivity increase over unpromoted silver (Ag) (~55%). Promoters such as cesium, rhenium, and molybdenum each add a few percent of selectivity enhancements to achieve 90% overall, but their codependence on Cl makes optimizing and understanding their function complex. We took a theory-guided, single-atom alloy approach to identify nickel (Ni) as a dopant in Ag that can facilitate selective oxidation by activating molecular oxygen (O 2 ) without binding oxygen (O) too strongly. Surface science experiments confirmed the facile adsorption/desorption of O 2…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.44
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Selectivity
- Nickel
- Catalysis
- Ethylene
- Chemistry
- Inorganic chemistry
- Nucleophile
- Adsorption