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Encyclopedia > Hydrogenolysis

Hydrogenolysis is a chemical reaction in which a compound is decomposed -- a molecule is broken into smaller molecules by the reaction of hydrogen.


It is a type of hydrogenation; other types include hydrodeoxygenation.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Intro to Transition Metal Carbides (5923 words)
This is in addition to their being potential supports for more traditional catalytic materials (Ni, Pt, Rh, etc.) due to their high heat stability.
The observation has been made that tungsten was active as a catalyst and showed good selectivity toward xylene formation during the isomerization and hydrogenolysis of 1,1,3-trimethylcyclopentane, but only after an induction period, as is also characteristic of platinum and paladium.
These are merely two examples: in fact, carbides of the Group IV-VI metals have been studied for their activity in oxidation, hydrogenation/dehydrogenation, isomerization, hydrogenolysis, and CO-H
Clean Fuels & Catalysis Research at PSU (6259 words)
Hydrogenolysis of Thiophenic Compounds on MoS2: A Computational Modeling of Heterogeneous Catalysis.
Simultaneous Hydrodesulfurization, Hydrodenitrogenation, Hydrogenolysis and Hydrogenation over MoS2-based Catalysts.
Proceedings of 16th Annual International Pittsburgh Coal Conference, Pittsburgh, PA, October 11-15, 1999, Paper No. 18-5
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