4.6 Article

Synthesis of Mesoporous Zeolites and Their Opportunities in Heterogeneous Catalysis

Journal

CATALYSTS
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/catal11121541

Keywords

mesoporous zeolite; heterogeneous catalysis; catalytic cracking; isomerization; alkylation and acylation; methanol-to-hydrocarbon; Fischer-Tropsch synthesis

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korean Government (MSIT) [NRF-2021R1A2C2008362]
  2. Chonnam National University [2020-3879]

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Mesoporous zeolites have become essential in the chemical industry due to their unique structural characteristics, offering versatile opportunities in both traditional and emerging catalysis fields. They have demonstrated longer lifetimes and better performance in catalytic reactions compared to their microporous counterparts.
Currently, zeolites are one of the most important classes of heterogeneous catalysts in chemical industries owing to their unique structural characteristics such as molecular-scale size/shape-selectivity, heterogenized single catalytic sites in the framework, and excellent stability in harsh industrial processes. However, the microporous structure of conventional zeolite materials limits their applications to small-molecule reactions. To alleviate this problem, mesoporous zeolitic frameworks were developed. In the last few decades, several methods have been developed for the synthesis of mesoporous zeolites; these zeolites have demonstrated greater lifetime and better performance than their bulk microporous counterparts in many catalytic processes, which can be explained by the rapid diffusion of reactant species into the zeolite framework and facile accessibility to bulky molecules through the mesopores. Mesoporous zeolites provide versatile opportunities not only in conventional chemical industries but also in emerging catalysis fields. This review presents many state-of-the-art mesoporous zeolites, discusses various strategies for their synthesis, and details their contributions to catalytic reactions including catalytic cracking, isomerization, alkylation and acylation, alternative fuel synthesis via methanol-to-hydrocarbon (MTH) and Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS) routes, and different fine-chemical syntheses.

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