(704b) The Shape of Water in Zeolites and the Impact on Alkene Epoxidations
AIChE Annual Meeting
2020
2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
Catalysis in Liquid Media I: Fundamentals
Tuesday, November 17, 2020 - 8:15am to 8:30am
Turnover rates for 1-hexene, 1-octene, and 1-decene epoxidations are greater in Ti-zeolite catalysts that contain significant densities of hydrogen-bonded SiOH ((SiOH)x; e.g., silanol nests) than within defect-free analogues. These rates reflect differences in activation enthalpies and entropies between a given Ti-zeolite and those quantities for the most hydrophobic form of that framework: these differences are defined as excess enthalpies and entropies (Hâ¡,ε, Sâ¡,ε) of activation, respectively. Changes in Hâ¡,ε and Sâ¡,ε primarily reflect changes in the enthalpy and entropy of the epoxidation transition states, which depend sensitively on their solvating environment. In situ vibrational spectroscopy of intraporous H2O and comparisons with molecular dynamics simulations that quantify hydrogen bonding interactions and the structure of solvent molecules within zeolite pores show that water congregates near (SiOH)x and forms dynamic structures (e.g., two-dimensional chains) that change with progress along the reaction coordinate. The disruption of H2O structures is reflected in Sâ¡,ε, whose magnitude depends on the extent of H2O perturbation and the topology of the surrounding pore. This research was supported by the DOE Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under grant DE-SC0020224.