4.6 Article

Origin of active sites on silica-magnesia catalysts and control of reactive environment in the one-step ethanol-to-butadiene process

Journal

NATURE CATALYSIS
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages 363-376

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41929-023-00945-0

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Wet-kneaded silica-magnesia is a benchmark catalyst for ethanol-to-butadiene Lebedev process. The formation of magnesium silicates and their properties are explained in terms of acid and base site ratios. However, the exact mechanism and reactivity of magnesium silicates have not been fully established.
Wet-kneaded silica-magnesia is a benchmark catalyst for the one-step ethanol-to-butadiene Lebedev process. Magnesium silicates, formed during wet kneading, have been proposed as the active sites for butadiene formation, and their properties are mainly explained in terms of the ratio of acid and base sites. However, their mechanism of formation and reactivity have not yet been fully established. Here we show that magnesium silicates are formed by the dissolution of Si and Mg subunits from their precursors, initiated by the alkaline pH of the wet-kneading medium, followed by cross-deposition on the precursor surfaces. Using two individual model systems (Mg/SiO2 and Si/MgO), we demonstrate that the location of the magnesium silicates (that is, Mg on SiO2 or Si on MgO) governs not only their chemical nature, but also the configuration of adsorbed ethanol and resulting selectivity. By using an NMR approach together with probe molecules, we demonstrate that acid and basic sites in close atomic proximity (similar to 5 angstrom) promote butadiene formation.

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