ARTICLE ON
Catalysing
Change
Catalysing change
What exactly is a catalyst? And just how have they changed
the face of the earth?
Adam Drew
Every biological chemical process in the universe would be
impossibly slow without an enzyme, a biological catalyst, to facilitate it and
speed things along. Even the seemingly simple processes of digestion and
processing sugar would literally take millions of years without the enzymes
present in our digestive tracts and cells. As well as naturally occurring
catalysts, we also use them in industries. Numerous manufacturing processes use
man-made catalysts on vast scales, even with our limited understanding of how
they work. The industry is worth tens of billions of dollars worldwide and is
indirectly responsible for hundreds of billions of dollars in commerce and
sustaining billions of human lives. Everyday household products like margarine
require catalysts to produce and, without the platinum based catalytic
converters in cars, the streets would be flooded with dangerous carbon monoxide
and nitrogen oxide fumes. However, the mechanisms by which catalysts work are
still being unraveled.
For a chemical reaction to take
place, and successfully turn the reactants into products, it needs to go
through a halfway point. This halfway point is an unstable chemical, known as
the ‘transition state’, and represents the reacting molecules coming together
into a single from, before they rearrange themselves into the final products.
The speed of any reaction is controlled by how easily the transition state can
be formed, which in turn depends on the speed and orientation the reacting
molecules have upon collision. A catalyst can speed up a chemical reaction in
two ways. First, by providing a new transition state which requires less energy
to reach, or by stabilising the existing transition state, thus resulting in
more molecular collisions, which then rearrange to form the product.
Most industrial catalysts consist of
a solid metal sheet or mesh, to which reacting molecules can stick, or adsorb.
The adsorption to the metal surface stretches and bends the bonds in reacting
molecules, facilitating their rearrangement to the desired products. For
example, the conversion of unsaturated fats to saturated fats via a process
called hydrogenation uses a powdered nickel catalyst, to which hydrogen
molecules bind, stretch and then detach into highly reactive hydrogen, speeding
up their addition to the unsaturated fat molecules.
Industrially, catalysts are divided
into two groups, heterogeneous: where catalyst and reaction are in two
different phases, e.g. liquid and solid, and homogeneous: where the catalyst
and reaction both occur in the same state, e.g. both are liquids. Heterogeneous
catalysts occur typically in the solid state, usually as a fine mesh or powder
in order to increase surface area the platinum/palladium mesh found in every
day catalytic converters. Simpler reactions where chemical and shape specific
selectivity are less important typically use heterogeneous catalysts for their
ease of use: separation of the liquid or gaseous reactants from the solid
catalyst is straightforward, allowing the catalyst to be reused in a cost effective
way. Homogeneous catalysts are in the same state as the reacting mixture,
usually liquid, and convey major operational advantages in the form of
excellent control over the nature of the products’ shape and chemical
properties. The price for these advantages is a substantial increase in cost
due to inherent difficulties in separating the catalytic species from the
reactant/product mixture. There is also often high toxicity to both people and
the environment associated with the transition metals generally used, such as
nickel tetracarbonyl, one of the most toxic substances used in industry.
The long term security of a catalyst
also depends heavily on its environmental impact and in the longer term, its
effects on society at large. The Haber-Bosch catalyst has been credited as
saving approximately 2.5 billion human lives from starvation by turning
atmospheric nitrogen into a cheap and readily available source of fertiliser.
Yet those 2.5 billion lives have themselves generated great disparity in wealth
and resources, and placed global food supply in a precarious position. The vast
increase in carbon dioxide emissions associated with such a population boom
also cannot be ignored. Serious long term damage to ecosystems surrounding
heavily fertilised agricultural land, due to problems such as algal bloom, has
been attributed to this process. Not forgotten is the not entirely unreasonable
accusation that the Haber-Bosch process extended the First World War by at
least 2 years by providing a cheap and abundant source of fixed nitrogen for
explosives as an alternative to the guano, a natural fertiliser made from
animal droppings, monopoly previously held by Chile and Peru.
What the Haber-Bosch process can
teach us is that industrial catalysts are an exceptionally powerful tool, but
with unpredictable and potentially damaging consequences; hence the growing
demand for catalysts contributing to a sustainable and environmentally sound
economy. Generating power using artificial photosynthesis (how plants turn sunlight
into energy)has been the subject of a great deal of research in recent decades
and finding a suitable catalysis for the splitting of water using light
(photolysis), in order to provide hydrogen for fuel cells, is a key part of the
process. Much catalytic research has focused on dyed titanium dioxide (TiO2), a
cheap and common metal oxide otherwise used as white paint. This otherwise
unremarkable material was found to be superbly stable in the conditions
occurring in photosynthesising cells, and shown to produce an electric current
when shone with sunlight. Dyed TiO2 may also hold the key to creating
self-cleaning materials, as exposure to sunlight can make the surface act like
a detergent, and possibly reducing atmospheric pollution, as in some circumstances
it can break down organic pollutants which deplete the ozone.
The future of catalysis appears promising. As our
understanding of them grows, new designs for catalytic pathways may appear,
potentially paving the way for a clean, sustainable chemical industry. However,
as always, it is the way these developments are exploited which will decide who
truly prospers from them.
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