4.6 Article

Deactivation of Sn-Beta zeolites caused by structural transformation of hydrophobic to hydrophilic micropores during aqueous-phase glucose isomerization

Journal

CATALYSIS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages 1654-1668

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8cy02589d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Purdue Process Safety and Assurance Center (P2SAC)
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) [9724240]
  3. MRSEC Program of the NSF [DMR-520565]
  4. Division Of Materials Research
  5. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [9724240] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The structural changes underlying the deactivation of Sn-Beta zeolites under aqueous-phase reaction conditions at elevated temperatures (373 K) are investigated using spectroscopic characterization and site titration techniques together with turnover rates for glucose isomerization, a well-understood probe reaction for which changes in measured rates can be ascribed to specific changes in catalyst structure. In the case of hydrophobic, low-defect Sn-Beta zeolites (Sn-Beta-F), treatment in hot liquid water (373 K) for short times (<1 h) prior to reaction causes glucose-fructose isomerization turnover rates (per open Sn site, 373 K) to increase, while longer-term exposure (>3 h) to hot liquid water causes turnover rates to decrease and approach values characteristic of hydrophilic, defect-rich Sn-Beta zeolites (Sn-Beta-OH). In contrast, turnover rates on hydrophilic Sn-Beta-OH zeolites are insensitive to the duration of hot liquid water exposure prior to reaction. Activation and deactivation phenomena on Sn-Beta-F zeolites occur concomitantly with the formation of silanol defects (by approximate to 2-10x) with increasing durations (0-24 h) of hot water treatment, despite negligible differences in open and closed Sn site speciation as quantified ex situ by CD3CN IR spectra. Mechanistic interpretations of these phenomena suggest that silanol groups present at low densities serve as binding sites for water molecules and clusters, which confer enthalpic stability to kinetically-relevant hydride-shift transition states and increase turnover rates, while silanol groups present in higher densities stabilize extended hydrogen-bonded water networks, which entropically destabilize kinetically-relevant transition states and decrease turnover rates. Intraporous voids within hydrophobic Sn-Beta-F zeolites become increasingly hydrophilic as silanol groups are formed by hydrolysis of framework siloxane bridges with increasing durations of water treatment, thereby decreasing aqueous-phase glucose isomerization turnover rates (per open Sn site). These findings suggest design strategies that suppress framework hydrolysis would attenuate the deactivation of Lewis acid zeolites in aqueous media.

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