JOURNAL ARTICLE

Catalytic Hydrogenation of p-Chloronitrobenzene to p-Chloroaniline Mediated by γ-Mo2N

Abstract

Promoting the production of industrially important aromatic chloroamines over transition-metal nitrides catalysts has emerged as a prominent theme in catalysis. This contribution provides an insight into the reduction mechanism of p-chloronitrobenzene (p-CNB) to p-chloroaniline (p-CAN) over the γ-Mo2N(111) surface by means of density functional theory calculations. The adsorption energies of various molecularly adsorbed modes of p-CNB were computed. Our findings display that, p-CNB prefers to be adsorbed over two distinct adsorption sites, namely, Mo-hollow face-centered cubic (fcc) and N-hollow hexagonal close-packed (hcp) sites with adsorption energies of -32.1 and -38.5 kcal/mol, respectively. We establish that the activation of nitro group proceeds through direct pathway along with formation of several reaction intermediates. Most of these intermediaries reside in a significant well-depth in reference to the entrance channel. Central to the constructed mechanism is H-transfer steps from fcc and hcp hollow sites to the NO/-NH groups through modest reaction barriers. Our computed rate constant for the conversion of p-CNB correlates very well with the experimental finding (0.018 versus 0.033 s-1 at ∼500 K). Plotted species profiles via a simplified kinetics model confirms the experimentally reported high selectivity toward the formation of p-CAN at relatively low temperatures. It is hoped that thermokinetics parameters and mechanistic pathways provided herein will afford a molecular level understanding for γ-Mo2N-mediated conversion of halogenated nitrobenzenes into their corresponding nitroanilines; a process that entails significant industrial applications.

Keywords:
Adsorption Catalysis Selectivity Transition state Chemistry Kinetics Reaction rate constant Nitro Nitrobenzene Crystallography Physical chemistry Materials science Organic chemistry Physics

Metrics

16
Cited By
1.27
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
35
Refs
0.75
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Nanomaterials for catalytic reactions
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Organic Chemistry
Ammonia Synthesis and Nitrogen Reduction
Physical Sciences →  Chemical Engineering →  Catalysis
Asymmetric Hydrogenation and Catalysis
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Inorganic Chemistry
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