Abstract
Abstract Facile hydrogenation of carbon-carbon double bonds was achieved in a poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) microfluidic reactor with immobilized noble nanoparticles, using the conversion of 6-bromo-1-hexene to 1-bromo-hexane as a model reaction. The microreactor was used to measure the intrinsic catalytic activity and turnover frequencies (TOF) of palladium (Pd), platinum (Pt) and ruthenium (Ru) nanocatalysts. The TOF of reactions run with immobilized nanocatalysts in the microfluidic reactor were hundreds of times larger than those measured in identical reactions in batch reactors. The combination of well-defined nanocatalysts and microfluidics significantly enhances hydrogen diffusion to catalytic sites, thus eliminating mass transfer limitations and enabling evaluation of the intrinsic catalytic activity. The system provides an excellent platform for high throughput screening of catalysts, and for conducting mechanistic studies of reaction kinetics.
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