Chem. J. Chinese Universities

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Cl-Mediated Facet Engineering and Electronic Modulation of Fe/MgO-CaO Catalysts for Glycerol Hydrogenolysis

MU Rongzhen1,2, WANG Jin1,2, YANG Jie1,2, ROY Tania1,2, WANG Jie1,2, GUO Baocheng1,2, ZHOU Chunhui1,2*   

  1. 1. Research Group for Advanced Materials & Sustainable Catalysis (AMSC), State Key Laboratory of Green Chemical Synthesis and Conversion, College of Chemical Engineering, Zhejiang University of Technology 2. Anhui International Exchange and Cooperation Base, Qing Yang Institute for Industrial Minerals
  • Received:2025-12-23 Revised:2026-03-15 Online First:2026-04-22 Published:2026-04-22
  • Contact: Chunhui Zhou E-mail:clay@zjut.edu.cn
  • Supported by:
    Supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42572045, 22072136, W2433034)

Abstract: To overcome the limitations of active component aggregation and uncontrolled facet exposure typical of impregnation methods, we report a chloride-mediated engineering strategy to precisely tailor the morphology and electronic structure of Fe/MgO-CaO catalysts. Structural characterizations reveal that the gas-etching effect during NH?Cl pyrolysis creates a porous architecture. Acting as a morphological modifier, NH?Cl induces the directional growth of MgO-CaO from disordered sheets into a rod-like structure with preferentially exposed (200) facets. At the microstructural level, Cl- doping strengthens the interaction between Fe species and the MgO lattice. This effectively inhibits the agglomeration of active components and promotes the formation of a highly dispersed Mg-Fe-O solid solution, while generating uniformly distributed Lewis acid sites on the catalyst surface. Consequently, the unique rod-like solid solution exhibits excellent structural stability during the catalytic reaction, successfully preventing framework collapse. Consequently, the optimized catalyst (Fe-Cl = 1.00) boosted glycerol conversion from 60 % to 90 % relative to the Cl- free benchmark. This chloride-mediated engineering strategy provides a blueprint for valorizing natural minerals and rationally designing robust non-noble metal catalysts.

Key words: Glycerol; Transition metal iron, Chloride, MgO/CaO, 1,2-Propanediol

CLC Number: 

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