4.5 Article

Mechanistic Studies on the Transformation of Ethanol into Ethene over Fe-ZSM-5 Zeolite

Journal

CHEMPHYSCHEM
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages 101-107

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cphc.201200786

Keywords

alcohols; alkenes; biomass; density functional calculations; zeolites

Funding

  1. National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA Chair Professor)
  2. National Science and Technology Development Agency (NANOTEC Center for Nanoscale Materials Design for Green Nanotechnology)
  3. Kasetsart University Research and Development Institute (KURDI)
  4. Commission on Higher Education, Ministry of Education (National Research University of Thailand)
  5. Commission on Higher Education, Ministry of Education (Postgraduate Education and Research Programs in Petroleum and Petrochemicals and Advanced Materials)
  6. Office of the Higher Education Commission, Thailand

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Ethanol, through the utilization of bioethanol as a chemical resource, has received considerable industrial attention as it provides an alternative route to produce more valuable hydrocarbons. Using a density functional theory approach incorporating the M06-L functional, which includes dispersion interactions, a large 34T nanocluster model of Fe-ZSM-5 zeolite in which T is a Si or Al atom is employed to examine both the stepwise and concerted mechanisms of the transformation of ethanol into ethene. For the stepwise mechanism, ethanol dehydration commences from the first hydrogen abstraction of the ethanol OH group to form the ethoxide-hydroxide intermediate with a low activation energy of 17.7 kcal?mol-1. Consequently, the ethoxide-hydroxide intermediate is decomposed into ethene through hydrogen abstraction from the ethoxide methyl carbon to either the OH group of hydroxide or the oxygen of the ethoxide group with high activation energies of 64.8 and 63.5 kcal?mol-1, respectively. For the concerted mechanism, ethanol transformation into the ethene product occurs in a single step without intermediate formation, with an activation energy of 32.9 kcal?mol-1.

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