Chem & Bio Engineering (Feb 2024)

3D-Printing of Hierarchical Porous Copper-Based Metal–Organic-Framework Structures for Efficient Fixed-Bed Catalysts

  • Ruizhe Xing,
  • Renliang Huang,
  • Rongxin Su,
  • Jie Kong,
  • Michael D. Dickey,
  • Wei Qi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/cbe.4c00001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 3
pp. 264 – 273

Abstract

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Metallic structures with hierarchical open pores that span several orders of magnitude are ideal candidates for various catalyst applications. However, porous metal materials prepared using alloy/dealloy methods still struggle to achieve continuous pore distribution across a broad size range. Herein, we report a printable copper (Cu)/iron (Fe) composite ink that produces a hierarchical porous Cu material with pores spanning over 4 orders of magnitude. The manufacturing process involves four steps: 3D-printing, annealing, dealloying, and reannealing. Because of the unique annealing process, the resulting hierarchical pore surface becomes coated with a layer of Cu–Fe alloy. This feature imparts remarkable catalytic ability and versatile functionality within fixed bed reactors for 4-nitrophenol (4-NP) reduction and Friedländer cyclization. Specifically, for 4-NP reduction, the porous Cu catalyst demonstrates an excellent reaction rate constant (kapp = 86.5 × 10–3 s–1) and a wide adaptability of the substrate (up to 1.26 mM), whilst for Friedländer cyclization, a conversion over 95% within a retention time of only 20 min can be achieved by metal–organic-framework-decorated porous Cu catalyst. The utilization of dual metallic particles as printable inks offers valuable insights for fabricating hierarchical porous metallic structures for applications, such as advanced fixed-bed catalysts.