Catalysis Flashcards
Why use catalysts?
· Use of catalyst should reduce - energy demand - by product formation - need for stoichiometric proportions Waste
Disadvantages of catalysts
- Many catalysts use heavy metals
- May be toxic
- Need to separate catalyst from product
- Recycle catalyst
- Catalyst may degrade - products may also be toxic
- Generally more economic and environmentally friendly to use catalyst than not
Describe the role of a catalyst in a chemical reaction
• Increase in rate of chemical reaction due to participation of catalyst
- Not consumed by reaction itself
- May participate in several chemical transformations
- Effect dependent on presence of other substances => reduced by inhibitors, increased by promoters
Types of catalyst
· Homogenous - reagents and catalyst in same phase (usually solution) e.g. acid catalysis
· Heterogeneous - industrially important - reactant and catalyst in different phases (reagent usually liquid or gas, catalyst usually solid e.g. metal alloy or metal oxides) e.g. catalytic converters => diffusion of reagents to surface and diffusion of products from surface
·Biocatalysis - use of enzyme for reaction catalysis
Catalyst properties: design/selection
· SA and porosity - heterogeneous catalysts => high SA materials formed as either finely divided substrate or crystallites with accessible internal pores => dense solid is unsuitable, examples include MgO, porosity types (lecture before)
· Surface acidic and basic sites - highly active for catalytic reactions e.g. alcohol dehydration and alkene isomerization
· Surface (active) metal sites - small metal particles on ceramic oxide substrates are very active catalysts e.g. catalytic converters
· Chemisorption and desorption - adsorption essential for heterogeneous catalysis to occur but must not be so strong that it blocks catalytic sites and prevents further reaction => adsorption of reactant on surfaces often activates molecules => physiorption - used to assess SA and porosity => chemisorption - used to assess accessible reactive sites
Surface migration - adsorbed atoms and molecules migrate over metal surfaces => mobility important in catalytic reactions as it allows atoms/molecules to find and approach one another
Types of advanced material catalysts
·Uniform catalyst - bulk of high SA material serves as catalyst e.g. zeolite
·Multiphasic catalysts - high SA material that serves as a support on to which an active catalyst is deposited
Define turnover frequency
Measure of no. of molecules produced per unit time
Define selectivity
Ratio of desired product formed to undesired product formed
Define catalyst
Alters chemical reaction by changing Ea and denotes/promotes routes taken whilst being unconsumed in the reaction
Define catalytic cycle
A diagram illustrating how catalysts and reactants change throughout a reaction in a closed loop cycle
Define catalyst support
A material that can be used as a host to an expensive catalyst to reduce cost
Define enantioselective
two enantiomers formed, attack occurs at chiral centre
Define regioselective
two isomers produced (e.g. tut 10 Q7, Br and OH form in similar regions but different bonds)
=> groups add at specific ends of double bond, minimal product results from steric hindrance
Region of turnover number which confirms catalysis
turnover number higher than 100 is considered to be catalytic
Define chemoselective
reaction occurs with limited no of functional groups