RESUMO
This study reports on the synthesis and characterization of novel perfluorinated organic polymers with azo- and azomethine-based linkers using nucleophilic aromatic substitution. The polymers were synthesized via the incorporation of decafluorobiphenyl and hexafluorobenzene linkers with diphenols in the basic medium. The variation in the linkers allowed the synthesis of polymers with different fluorine and nitrogen contents. The rich fluorine polymers were slightly soluble in THF and have shown molecular weights ranging from 4886 to 11,948 g/mol. All polymers exhibit thermal stability in the range of 350-500 °C, which can be attributed to their structural geometry, elemental contents, branching, and cross-linking. For instance, the cross-linked polymers with high nitrogen content, DAB-Z-1h and DAB-Z-1O, are more stable than azomethine-based polymers. The cross-linking was characterized by porosity measurements. The azo-based polymer exhibited the highest surface area of 770 m2/g with a pore volume of 0.35 cm3/g, while the open-chain azomethine-based polymer revealed the lowest surface area of 285 m2/g with a pore volume of 0.0872 cm3/g. Porous structures with varied hydrophobicities were investigated as adsorbents for separating water-benzene and water-phenol mixtures and selectively binding methane/carbon dioxide gases from the air. The most hydrophobic polymers containing the decafluorbiphenyl linker were suitable for benzene separation, while the best methane uptake values were 6.14 and 3.46 mg/g for DAB-Z-1O and DAB-A-1O, respectively. On the other hand, DAB-Z-1h, with the highest surface area and being rich in nitrogen sites, has recorded the highest CO2 uptake at 298 K (17.25 mg/g).
RESUMO
Ammonia (NH3), often stored in large quantities before being used in the production of fertilizer, and sulfur dioxide (SO2), a byproduct of fossil fuel consumption, particularly the burning of coal, are highly toxic and corrosive gases that pose a significant danger to humans if accidentally released. Therefore, developing advanced materials to enable their effective capture and safe storage is highly desired. Herein, advanced benzimidazole-derived carbons (BIDCs) with an exceptional capacity for NH3 and SO2 have been designed and tested. These heteroatom-doped porous carbon adsorbents were synthesized by thermolysis of imidazolate-potassium salts affording high surface area and controlled heteroatom content to optimize for rapid NH3 and SO2 gas uptake and release under practical conditions. According to gas uptake measurements, these nitrogen-doped carbons exhibit exceptional gas adsorption capacity, with BIDC-3-800 adsorbing 21.42 mmol/g SO2 at 298 K and 1 bar, exceeding most reported porous materials and BIDC-2-700 adsorbing 14.26 mmol/g NH3 under the same conditions. The NH3 uptake of BIDC-2-700 surpassed reported activated carbons and is among the best adsorbents including metal organic frameworks (MOFs). Our synthetic method allows for control over both textural and chemical properties of the carbon and enables heteroatom functionality to be incorporated directly into the carbon framework without the need for postsynthetic modification. These materials were also tested for recyclability; all adsorbents showed almost complete retention of their initial gas uptake capacity during recyclability studies and maintained their structural integrity and their previous adsorption capacity of both NH3 and SO2, highlighting their potential for practical application.
RESUMO
Palladium catalyzed cross-coupling reactions represent a significant advancement in contemporary organic synthesis as these reactions are of strategic importance in the area of pharmaceutical drug discovery and development. Supported palladium-based catalysts are highly sought-after in carbon-carbon bond forming catalytic processes to ensure catalyst recovery and reuse while preventing product contamination. This paper reports the development of heterogeneous Pd-based bimetallic catalysts supported on fumed silica that have high activity and selectivity matching those of homogeneous catalysts, eliminating the catalyst's leaching and sintering and allowing efficient recycling of the catalysts. Palladium and base metal (Cu, Ni or Co) contents of less than 1.0 wt% loading are deposited on a mesoporous fumed silica support (surface area SABET = 350 m2 g-1) using strong electrostatic adsorption (SEA) yielding homogeneously alloyed nanoparticles with an average size of 1.3 nm. All bimetallic catalysts were found to be highly active toward Suzuki cross-coupling (SCC) reactions with superior activity and stability for the CuPd/SiO2 catalyst. A low CuPd/SiO2 loading (Pd: 0.3 mol%) completes the conversion of bromobenzene and phenylboronic acid to biphenyl in 30 minutes under ambient conditions in water/ethanol solvent. In contrast, monometallic Pd/SiO2 (Pd: 0.3 mol%) completes the same reaction in three hours under the same conditions. The combination of Pd with the base metals helps in retaining the Pd0 status by charge donation from the base metals to Pd, thus lowering the activation energy of the aryl halide oxidative addition step. Along with its exceptional activity, CuPd/SiO2 exhibits excellent recycling performance with a turnover frequency (TOF) of 280 000 h-1 under microwave reaction conditions at 60 °C. Our study demonstrates that SEA is an excellent synthetic strategy for depositing ultra-small Pd-based bimetallic nanoparticles on porous silica for SCC. This avenue not only provides highly active and sintering-resistant catalysts but also significantly lowers Pd contents in the catalysts without compromising catalytic activity, making the catalysts very practical for large-scale applications.