(52e) Investigating the Effects of Extra-Framework Aluminum Species in Acidic Chabazite Zeolites Using Protolytic Alkane Activation Kinetics | AIChE

(52e) Investigating the Effects of Extra-Framework Aluminum Species in Acidic Chabazite Zeolites Using Protolytic Alkane Activation Kinetics

Authors 

Gounder, R., Purdue University
Brønsted acid (H+) sites in zeolites catalyze alkane activation through mechanisms involving carbocationic transition states.1 The stability of these transition states, and consequently the rates of alkane activation, is influenced by the secondary environment that surrounds H+ sites, which comprises the confining inorganic pore2 and other H+ sites3 or extra-framework aluminum (Alex) species4,5 located nearby. In H-MFI, Alex species are proposed to modify H+ site environments through Lewis acid-base or dispersive interactions, leading to contrasting proposals on their effects on alkane activation transition state entropic and enthalpic stability.4,5 Moreover, H+ sites in MFI are located in diverse void environments (e.g., smaller straight and sinusoidal channels, and larger channel intersections)6 and a variety of proximal Al-Al site configurations7, complicating interpretation of kinetic data. Thus, the role of Alex species on the intrinsic reactivity of H+ sites and its consequences for alkane activation catalysis remain imprecisely understood. Herein, H-CHA zeolites with isolated H+ sites are used as model materials (single T-site) to interrogate the influence of Alex species on the kinetics of protolytic alkane activation. Measured first-order rate constants (per H+) for alkane activation increased with Alex fraction, determined from site balances considering total and framework Al content. Measured activation enthalpies and entropies for propane and n-butane activation were lower on samples with higher Alex fractions. Furthermore, entropy-enthalpy compensation trends for alkane activation transition states in CHA samples with varying Alex fractions resemble those for alkane adsorption8, which are predominantly governed by dispersive interactions. This suggests that Alex species located near H+ sites stabilize alkane activation transition states through dispersive interactions by occluding void space, leading to lower activation barriers and higher rate constants. Our findings reveal effects of Alex species on the reactivity of zeolite H+ sites and develop mechanistic explanations that predict chemical properties and catalytic reactivity of acid zeolites.