4.7 Article

Effects of zeolite frameworks and hierarchical structures on catalytic bioethanol dehydration: In-situ DRIFTS and DFT studies

Journal

FUEL
Volume 338, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fuel.2022.127208

Keywords

Zeolite frameworks; Hierarchical zeolites; Bioethanol dehydration; In -situ DRIFTS studies; DFT calculations

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In this study, in-situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) and density functional theory (DFT) were used to investigate the effects of different zeolite frameworks and hierarchical structures on catalytic bioethanol dehydration. The findings show that different zeolite frameworks promote different reaction pathways due to the formation of distinct intermediates. The incorporation of hierarchical structures in the zeolite framework improves catalytic stability and reduces coke formation.
Herein, the combined in-situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy and density functional theory studies were employed to investigate the effects of different zeolite frameworks and hierarchical struc-tures on catalytic bioethanol dehydration. The findings reveal that different zeolite frameworks enable the formation of distinct intermediates, hence promoting different mechanistic pathways. Interestingly, the FER is highly selective to ethylene and inhibits the formation of by-products thanks to the confined porous structure of the FER. Although the pristine small pore FER often suffers from fast catalyst deactivation, the incorporation of hierarchical structures in the FER framework can mitigate this significantly. Accordingly, the catalytic stability of the hierarchical FER was improved remarkably with a high ethylene yield (similar to 95%), whereas the pristine FER suffers from fast deactivation. Additionally, coke formation over the hierarchical FER catalyst was also reduced significantly compared to that of the pristine FER. Importantly, the in-situ DRIFTS studies reveal that the different reaction pathways over hierarchical and commercial FER have been observed in which the hierarchical one promotes the monomeric pathway due to the facile desorption of corresponding products and intermediates, whilst the pristine one promotes bioethanol conversion via both pathways of monomeric and dimeric pathways to produce ethylene and diethyl ether, respectively.

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