4.3 Article

Protonated methylcyclopropane is an intermediate providing complete 13C-label scrambling at C4 olefin isomerization in zeolite

Journal

CHEM CATALYSIS
Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.checat.2022.100503

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Carbocations are important in catalytic reactions, but their instability makes it difficult to study them thoroughly. Stabilizing carbocations would greatly enhance our understanding of reaction mechanisms.
Carbocations play crucial roles during catalytic reactions by dictating the reaction pathways and genuine mechanisms, but the instability of carbocations prevents thorough observations. The stabilization of carbocations would greatly help us gain a deep understanding of the reaction mechanisms. By means of ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations and an in situ exper-imental approach, a complete scrambling of 13C-labeled C4= prod-ucts was observed during the isomerization reaction in the H-ZSM-5 zeolite at room temperature, and the corner-protonated methyl-cyclopropanes (as a non-classical carbocation) featuring the three -center two-electron (3c-2e) bonds were confirmed to be the highly active metastable intermediates of C4 isomerization. Our results not only uncover the nature of facile C shift in carbocations during zeolite-catalyzed reactions but also bring some fundamental understandings to carbocation chemistry in a zeolite confined environment.

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