(690g) Effects of Coordination Environment on the Reactivity, Selectivity, and Stability of Iron Carboxylate MOFs for Peroxide-Mediated Alkene Oxidation | AIChE

(690g) Effects of Coordination Environment on the Reactivity, Selectivity, and Stability of Iron Carboxylate MOFs for Peroxide-Mediated Alkene Oxidation

Authors 

Yang, R. A. - Presenter, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Sarazen, M., Princeton University
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are porous catalysts active in diverse chemical transformations, including hydrocarbon oxidation by benign oxidants (e.g., hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and air).1,2 Here, Fe-based carboxylate MIL-100(Fe), MIL-101(Fe), and NH2-MIL-101(Fe) were synthesized3-5 to decouple the effects of framework pore size, Fe oxidation state, and coordination environment on reactivity, selectivity, and material stability for a probe aryl (styrene) oxidation utilizing H2O2. Mesoporous MIL-101 and MIL-100 have similar MTN zeotype framework structures, but MIL-100 has smaller pore-limiting diameters (0.86 nm, 0.55 nm) in contrast with those for MIL-101 (1.6 nm, 1.2 nm). Here, the kinetic diameter of styrene is 0.60 nm, indicating that styrene (and oxygenate products) may diffuse through all MIL-101 cages, but only through the larger MIL-100 cage. MIL-101(Fe) demonstrates higher lumped first-order rate constants (normalized by moles of Fe) for styrene oxidation compared to MIL-100(Fe) at 323 K. This disparity in reactivity is a result of less accessible sites in MIL-100 compared to MIL-101 but also depends on coordination environment, acidic/basic site densities, Fe valency distributions, and surface coverages by DMF-derived species originating from different synthetic procedures that all govern oxygenate selectivities and material stability. MIL-101(Fe) is also more reactive than NH2-functionalized MIL-101(Fe) despite identical pore sizes. Inductive effects of the amine group decrease metal site and reactive intermediate electrophilicities and, thus, rates. Notably, NH2-MIL-101(Fe) demonstrates fractional benzaldehyde selectivity near unity compared to ≤0.59 ±0.03 for MIL-101(Fe), which is likely rooted in disparate H2O2-derived reactive intermediate distributions imposed by first and second coordination effects. Finally, deactivation mechanisms are probed for all three frameworks, but the degree of metal leaching, Fe valency changes, and CxHyOzNm surface coverages differ in their relative contributions to catalyst inefficiencies. Overall, this work provides fundamental insight into structure-function relationships for transition-metal MOF oxidation catalysts.

References

  1. [1] https://doi.org/10.1021/cr9003924
  2. [2] https://doi.org/10.1039/C1CY00068C
  3. [3] https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.cgd.6b01776
  4. [4] https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcat.2012.11.003
  5. [5] https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2018.09.122