4.6 Article

Methane-to-methanol conversion over zeolite Cu-SSZ-13, and its comparison with the selective catalytic reduction of NOx with NH3

Journal

CATALYSIS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 8, Issue 4, Pages 1028-1038

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7cy02461d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO-CW)
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie [702149]
  3. Sachem Inc. [ZeoGen 2825]

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The direct conversion of methane into methanol is considered as one of the holy grails in hydrocarbon chemistry and recently it was found that small pore zeolites, such as Cu-SSZ-13, Cu-SSZ-16 and Cu-SSZ-39, are active for this process. Here, we propose a reaction mechanism based on spectroscopic evidence for the methane-to-methanol reaction over Cu-SSZ-13 (Si/Al = 20). Using in situ FT-IR and operando UV-vis-NIR DRS, performed on a series of different Cu-ion-exchanged SSZ-13 zeolites, both a mono-nuclear site or a dimeric copper active site are consistent with the observations of this study. These proposed active site(s) are characterized by a nu(OH) at similar to 3654 cm(-1) and a charge transfer (CT) transition at similar to 29000 cm(-1). We have further evidence to complete the full catalytic cycle to methanol, including the formation of the reaction intermediate Cu(CH3)(H2O), which is characterized by overtone transitions, i.e., a 2 nu(OH) at similar to 4200 cm(-1) and a 2 nu(OH) at similar to 5248 cm(-1). We found that increasing the pre-oxidation temperature from 450 degrees C to 550 degrees C resulted in a 15% increase in methanol production, as well as a concomitant increase of the 29000 cm-1 CT transition. Furthermore, Cu-exchanged SSZ-13 zeolites, which perform well in the NH3-SCR reaction at 200 degrees C (the low temperature regime), also show a high activity in the methane-to-methanol reaction and vice versa, leading us to believe that this material has a similar if not the same active site for both the catalytic reduction of NO and the stepwise reaction towards methanol.

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