JOURNAL ARTICLE

Selectivity Control in Catalytic Reductive Amination of Furfural to Furfurylamine on Supported Catalysts

Abstract

Abstract Amines are widely used in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, agricultural chemicals, polymers, and surfactants. However, amines are mostly produced via petrochemical means, which motivates amine production from renewable resources, such as biomass. However, biomass compounds present added challenges involving poor carbon balances. We show that furfural reacts homogeneously with ammonia to produce reactive primary imines, which form large side products and leads to significant carbon losses. The carbon balance is improved by mixing furfural with furfurylamine prior to reaction to form a secondary imine for use as the reaction substrate. While controlling the primary to secondary amine selectivity is a common challenge in reductive amination, supported metal catalysts, including Ni/SiO 2 , Co/SiO 2 , and Ru/SiO 2 optimize the primary amine yield to 90 to 94 % by using the secondary imine as the reaction substrate. A qualitative correlation between the primary to secondary amine selectivity with the nitrogen binding energy of metals is identified.

Keywords:
Furfural Chemistry Amination Selectivity Catalysis Amine gas treating Reductive amination Organic chemistry Imine

Metrics

65
Cited By
3.19
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
39
Refs
0.91
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Asymmetric Hydrogenation and Catalysis
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Inorganic Chemistry
Ammonia Synthesis and Nitrogen Reduction
Physical Sciences →  Chemical Engineering →  Catalysis
Catalysis for Biomass Conversion
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
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