Abstract

Epoxidation of allyl chloride and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) carried out in heterogeneous catalytic systems suffer from poor reaction efficiency due to their heavy mass transfer resistance present at the liquid-liquid interface. Pickering interfacial catalysis (PIC) provides an elegant solution by involving the design of amphiphilic heterogeneous catalysts, which can act as emulsifiers simultaneously. In this study, interface-active polyoxometalate-loaded hyper-crosslinked nanoparticles (HCNPs) were designed. The structural properties of materials were characterized in detail by elemental analysis, Zeta potential, ICP-OES, SEM, TEM, BET, FT-IR, TGA, and XPS. The prepared nanoparticles can build efficient W/O PIC systems with allyl chloride and H2O2. Systematic experiments indicate that catalysts' surface properties, catalyst dosage, and water/oil volume ratio significantly affect the PIC system's catalytic activity and emulsion properties. Moreover, this PIC system maintains high stability after the reaction and can be reused for at least 8 cycles. Excitingly, these interface-active HCNPs can also efficiently promote allyl chloride epoxidation in the absence of solvent and external stirring, illustrating that this approach holds great potential for developing catalytic systems suitable for multiphase reactions.

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