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Dynamic duo: two catalysts build valuable carbon chains.


By combining the power of two well-known reactions, chemists have devised a way to alter the length of carbon chains. The process might someday convert less-valuable carbon chains into a transportation fuel, the researchers say.

As oil supplies shrink, chemical processes that turn coal or biomass such as corn into liquid hydrocarbons will become more important, says chemist Maurice Brookhart Maurice S. Brookhart is the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Chemistry (1990 to the present) in the Department of Chemistry at the University of North Carolina.

Brookhart received his Bachelor of Science from Johns Hopkins University in 1964. He received his Ph.D.
 of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is a public, coeducational, research university located in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States. Also known as The University of North Carolina, Carolina, North Carolina, or simply UNC . Of particular interest are linear alkanes The following is a list of straight-chain alkanes and their common names, sorted by number of carbon atoms.

Number of C atoms Formula Common name Synonyms
1 CH4 Methane marsh gas; methyl hydride; natural gas
2 C2H6
, chains in which single bonds connect carbon atoms and hydrogen atoms fill out the molecules. Diesel engines, for example, run most efficiently on alkanes with 9 to 20 carbons per molecule.

The reaction that converts coal and biomass to alkanes, however, produces carbon chains of many lengths. Included in the mix are alkanes with four to seven carbons, lengths that can't be used as fuel, says Brookhart.

Brookhart, Alan S. Goldman of Rutgers University Rutgers University, main campus at New Brunswick, N.J.; land-grant and state supported; coeducational except for Douglass College; chartered 1766 as Queen's College, opened 1771. Campuses and Facilities


Rutgers maintains three campuses.
 in Piscataway, N.J., and their research teams used two catalysts to promote reactions that together reclaimed the short alkanes. The first reaction removes two hydrogen atoms from an alkane alkane (ăl`kān), any of a group of aliphatic hydrocarbons whose molecules contain only single bonds (see chemical bond). Alkanes have the general chemical formula CnH2n+2. , creating a double bond between two of the molecule's carbons. The second reaction induces two molecules to exchange chain portions from either side of the double-bonded carbons. Then, the first reaction's catalyst returns the hydrogen atoms, eliminating the double bond.

The reactions convert a starting short alkane into products with two lengths. For example, two 6-carbon-long alkanes-hexanes-would become a 10-carbon alkane--decane--and a 2-carbon alkane-ethane. "Then, you are in great shape: You've got the diesel fuel, and you've got the ethane ethane (ĕth`ān), CH3CH3, gaseous hydrocarbon. It is a continuous-chain alkane. As a constituent of natural gas, it is used for fuel. It can be prepared by cracking and fractional distillation of petroleum. ;' a gas that can be used as heating fuel, says Goldman. The team describes its work in the April 14 Science.

"It's a spectacularly clever use of those two reactions" says John F. Hartwig of Yale University.

But the process is far from ready for industrial applications, Brookhart notes. For example, the number of reactions that each catalyst molecule can perform before becoming unstable must increase from about 1,000 to several million.

The reactions' selectivity isn't optimal either, Brookhart says. The catalysts also convert alkanes of desired lengths into other lengths. "What we would really like is, from hexane hexane /hex·ane/ (hek´san) a saturated hydrogen obtained by distillation from petroleum.

hex·ane
n.
, to get only ethane and decane dec·ane  
n.
Any of various liquid isomers, C10H22, of the methane series.



decane  
;' says Brookhart. However, he notes that with the current procedure, chemists could put the unwanted alkanes "back in the pot" to cycle through the reactions again.

The group is now testing other catalysts for its system.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Cunningham, A.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 15, 2006
Words:401
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