Abstract

Interfacial electric fields at heterogeneous catalyst surfaces have been demonstrated to alter kinetics of liquid-phase reactions. In these systems, electric fields are generated from applying a potential to the catalyst through connection to a potentiostat or through electron transfer from redox-active species in solution. Here, we demonstrate that catalyst polarization can also occur by simply contacting electrically conductive inert solids, leading to the counterintuitive conclusion that a catalyst particle touching an inert solid can alter intrinsic reaction rates. Using dehydration of 1-methylcyclopentanol to 1-methylcyclopentene catalyzed by Brønsted-acidic carboxylic acid groups on carbon nanotubes as a proof-of-concept probe reaction, we show that catalyst contact with inert, thermally reduced carbon nanotubes leads to order-of-magnitude changes in reaction rate. Furthermore, we demonstrate that these contact-induced effects can also be observed under standard laboratory reaction conditions, where particle-to-particle contact in stirred catalyst powder suspensions is sufficient to demote rates by ∼8-fold. This work provides the foundation for a new method of reaction rate control, which could have implications whenever heterogeneous catalyst particles are in contact with inert materials for liquid-phase reactions in the presence of electrolyte.

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Year
2025
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Bhavish Dinakar, Juan F. Torres, Mostapha Dakhchoune et al. (2025). Contact with Electrically Conductive Inert Solids Alters Intrinsic Heterogeneous Brønsted Acid Catalysis. Journal of the American Chemical Society . https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5c12973

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DOI
10.1021/jacs.5c12973