(461a) Influence of Clusters of Brønsted Acid Sites on Methanol Dehydration Rates in Zeolite Catalysts | AIChE

(461a) Influence of Clusters of Brønsted Acid Sites on Methanol Dehydration Rates in Zeolite Catalysts

Authors 

Hibbitts, D. - Presenter, University of Florida
Dimethyl ether (DME) and water are selectively formed from methanol at low temperatures over Brønsted acid catalysts, which serves as a simple probe reaction to evaluate confinement and acid strength of zeolites. CHA zeolites can be selectively synthesized with controlled fractions of Al sharing six-member rings (6-MR) without altering the bulk Si:Al. These ‘paired’ sites can be titrated using divalent Co2+ cations and distinguished from ‘isolated’ Al not sharing 6-MR. CHA samples with higher fractions of paired Al form DME at higher rates per H+ than those with predominantly isolated Al during kinetic studies, and first- and zero-order rate constants derived from CHA samples with varying paired-Al content indicate paired sites have free energy barriers 5–7 kJ mol−1 lower than isolated sites.

Density functional theory (DFT) calculations indicate that these higher turnover rates occur because, when a cationic transition state forms at an acid site, its conjugate base is stabilized by H-bonding with the methanol species co-adsorbed to the neighboring site. Periodicity in these DFT calculations reveals that repeating cation-anion chains reduce barriers more than estimated experimentally, by up to 15 kJ mol−1. Not all Al pairs increase rates, however, as DFT-calculated surface methylation barriers vary from 106–128 kJ mol−1 across 23 distinct two-Al pairs (compared to 122 kJ mol−1 for isolated sites). Beyond pairs, clusters of Brønsted acid sites (>2 total sites spaced 1–3 T-sites apart) can more significantly change surface methylation barriers, which range from 89–147 kJ mol−1 near clusters of 3 acid sites, 67–163 kJ mol−1 near clusters of 4, and 56–170 kJ mol−1 near clusters of 5 (Fig. 1). These data show that clusters sites can have even greater effects on the rates of zeolite-catalyzed reactions than paired sites and give new insights into the behavior of low Si:Al zeolites.

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