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[More press releases] Press ReleaseAngewandte Chemie International Edition 2010, 49, 980–983 doi: 10.1002/anie.200905643 Nr. 03/2010 January 19, 2010 Golden PairsCatalytic dimers of gold atoms make ethylene from methaneContact: Thorsten M. Bernhardt, Universität Ulm (Germany) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Methane Activation and Catalytic Ethylene Formation on Free Au2+ Ions Ethylene (ethene, CH2=CH2) is a primary feedstock for
chemical industry, and particularly for the production of plastics like
polyethylene and polystyrene. Ethylene is currently made by the steam
cracking of fossil fuel fractions. A possible alternative to this may be
the production of ethylene from methane (CH4), because
although fossil fuel supplies are slowly declining, methane is still
found in giant natural gas deposits. The problem is that the
carbon–hydrogen bonds in methane are very difficult to break. It thus
usually takes extreme conditions to induce the carbon in methane to
form bonds with other carbon atoms. Furthermore, this reaction
usually produces a mixture. Scientists working with Thorsten M.
Bernhardt at the University of Ulm (Germany) and Uzi Landman at the
Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta, USA), have now found a process
by which methane can be selectively converted into ethylene at low
pressures and temperatures. Free gold dimers catalyze the reaction, the
researchers report in the journal Angewandte Chemie.
 © Wiley-VCH
“Methane activation, meaning the ‘cracking’ of C–H bonds, is a very
complex process,” explain the scientists, “which must be understood at
the molecular level before practically applicable catalytic processes
can be developed.” To investigate this, the team carried out experiments
with different catalytic metal clusters (aggregates of a few metal
atoms) as model systems. In tests with particles made of a few gold
atoms, they found that positively charged particles made of two gold
atoms (Au2+) selectively convert methane into
ethylene in the gas phase.
Through experiments in which intermediates of the reaction were
“trapped”, as well as model computations, the researchers were able to
formulate a reaction mechanism for this catalytic cycle. Each gold atom
of the gold dimers binds to a methane molecule; hydrogen is split off
and the two carbon atoms form a single bond to each other. This ethylene
precursor initially remains bound to one of the gold atoms, and the freed
gold atom binds to a new methane molecule. In the last step, another
methane molecule displaces the ethylene precursor from its spot on the
gold atom and ethylene is released. At this point the reaction cycle can
begin again.
“Both the activation of the carbon–hydrogen bonds of the methane and the
subsequent splitting off of the ethylene molecule require cooperative
action of several atoms bound to the gold dimer,” Berhnardt and Landman
explain further details of the mechanism. “Our insights are not only of
fundamental interest, but may also be of practical use.”
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