TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanistic Study on Deoxydehydration and Hydrogenation of Methyl Glycosides to Dideoxy Sugars over a ReO x-Pd/CeO2Catalyst
AU - Cao, Ji
AU - Tamura, Masazumi
AU - Hosaka, Ryu
AU - Nakayama, Akira
AU - Hasegawa, Jun Ya
AU - Nakagawa, Yoshinao
AU - Tomishige, Keiichi
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by Grand–in–aid for Challenging Exploratory (18K18965), and partially supported by Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (S) (18H05247) from JSPS and the Cooperative Research Program of Institute for Catalysis, Hokkaido University (Proposal 19A1006). J.C. thanks the China Scholarship Council for financial support. Part of the calculations was performed on supercomputers at RCCS (Okazaki), RIIT (Kyushu Univ.), and the Center for Computational Materials Science, Institute for Materials Research (Tohoku University, Proposal No. 19S0006).
Funding Information:
This work was supported by Grand-in-aid for Challenging Exploratory (18K18965), and partially supported by Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (S) (18H05247) from JSPS and the Cooperative Research Program of Institute for Catalysis, Hokkaido University (Proposal 19A1006). J.C. thanks the China Scholarship Council for financial support. Part of the calculations was performed on supercomputers at RCCS (Okazaki), RIIT (Kyushu Univ.), and the Center for Computational Materials Science, Institute for Materials Research (Tohoku University Proposal No. 19S0006).
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/10/16
Y1 - 2020/10/16
N2 - We found that nonprotected methyl glycosides with cis-vicinal OH groups could be converted to the corresponding methyl dideoxy glycosides by deoxydehydration and consecutive hydrogenation (DODH + HG) over a ReOx-Pd/CeO2 catalyst with gaseous H2. In the study, the reactivity of the methyl glycosides in DODH was clearly lower than that of simple cyclic vicinal diols, such as cis-1,2-cyclohexanediol and cis-1,2-cyclopentanediol, and the reactivity of the methyl glycosides was also different. Herein, we investigated the reactivity difference based on kinetic studies and density-functional theory (DFT) calculations. The kinetic studies suggest that the reactivity difference between the methyl glycosides and the simple diols is derived from the OH group of methyl glycosides except the cis-vicinal diols, and that the reactivity difference among the methyl glycosides will be associated with the configuration of the substituents adjacent to the cis-vicinal diols, while the reaction mechanism of DODH is suggested to be basically similar judging from almost the same reaction orders with respect to the substrate concentration and H2 pressure in all substrates. The adsorption and transition states of methyl α -l- rhamnopyranoside and methyl α-l-fucopyranoside, which have a large reactivity difference (methyl α-l-rhamnopyranoside≫ methyl α-l-fucopyranoside), were estimated by DFT calculations with ReOx/CeO2 as the active site of the ReOx-Pd/CeO2 catalyst, showing that the main difference is the activation energy in DODH of these substrates (65 kJ mol-1 for methyl α-l-rhamnopyranoside and 77 kJ mol-1 for methyl α-l-fucopyranoside), which was also supported by the results of Arrhenius plots (63 and 73 kJ mol-1 for methyl α-l-rhamnopyranoside and methyl α-l-fucopyranoside, respectively). The activation energy was influenced by the torsional angle of the substituents adjacent to the cis-vicinal OH groups, which is derived from the interaction of the OH group adjacent to the cis-vicinal OH groups and the surface hydroxy groups on CeO2.
AB - We found that nonprotected methyl glycosides with cis-vicinal OH groups could be converted to the corresponding methyl dideoxy glycosides by deoxydehydration and consecutive hydrogenation (DODH + HG) over a ReOx-Pd/CeO2 catalyst with gaseous H2. In the study, the reactivity of the methyl glycosides in DODH was clearly lower than that of simple cyclic vicinal diols, such as cis-1,2-cyclohexanediol and cis-1,2-cyclopentanediol, and the reactivity of the methyl glycosides was also different. Herein, we investigated the reactivity difference based on kinetic studies and density-functional theory (DFT) calculations. The kinetic studies suggest that the reactivity difference between the methyl glycosides and the simple diols is derived from the OH group of methyl glycosides except the cis-vicinal diols, and that the reactivity difference among the methyl glycosides will be associated with the configuration of the substituents adjacent to the cis-vicinal diols, while the reaction mechanism of DODH is suggested to be basically similar judging from almost the same reaction orders with respect to the substrate concentration and H2 pressure in all substrates. The adsorption and transition states of methyl α -l- rhamnopyranoside and methyl α-l-fucopyranoside, which have a large reactivity difference (methyl α-l-rhamnopyranoside≫ methyl α-l-fucopyranoside), were estimated by DFT calculations with ReOx/CeO2 as the active site of the ReOx-Pd/CeO2 catalyst, showing that the main difference is the activation energy in DODH of these substrates (65 kJ mol-1 for methyl α-l-rhamnopyranoside and 77 kJ mol-1 for methyl α-l-fucopyranoside), which was also supported by the results of Arrhenius plots (63 and 73 kJ mol-1 for methyl α-l-rhamnopyranoside and methyl α-l-fucopyranoside, respectively). The activation energy was influenced by the torsional angle of the substituents adjacent to the cis-vicinal OH groups, which is derived from the interaction of the OH group adjacent to the cis-vicinal OH groups and the surface hydroxy groups on CeO2.
KW - deoxydehydration
KW - heterogeneous catalysis
KW - methyl glycoside
KW - rhenium
KW - sugar conversion
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U2 - 10.1021/acscatal.0c02309
DO - 10.1021/acscatal.0c02309
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85096529114
SN - 2155-5435
VL - 10
SP - 12040
EP - 12051
JO - ACS Catalysis
JF - ACS Catalysis
IS - 20
ER -