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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(27): e202303503, 2023 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37041117

ABSTRACT

We report a general synthetic strategy for post-encapsulation of metal nanoparticles within preformed zeolites using post-synthetic modification. Both anionic and cationic precursors to metal nanoparticle are supported on 8- and 10-membered ring zeolites and analogues during wet impregnation using 2-aminoethanethiol (AET) as a bi-grafting agent. Thiol groups are coordinated to metal centers, whereas amine moieties are dynamically attached to micropore walls via acid-base interactions. The dynamic acid-base interactions cause the even distribution of the metal-AET complex throughout the zeolite matrix. These processes encapsulate Au, Rh, and Ni precursors within the CHA, *MRE, MFI zeolite, and SAPO-34 zeolite analogues, for which small channel apertures preclude the post-synthesis impregnation of metal precursors. Sequential activation forms small and uniform nanoparticles (1-2.5 nm in diameter), as confirmed through electron microscopy and X-ray absorption spectroscopy. Containment within the small micropores protected the nanoparticles against harsh thermal sintering conditions and prevented the fouling of the metal surface by coke, thus resulting in a high catalytic performance in n-dodecane hydroisomerization and methane decomposition. The remarkable specificity of the thiol to metal precursors and the dynamic acid-base interaction make these protocols extendable to various metal-zeolite systems, suitable for shape-selective catalysts in challenging chemical environments.

2.
JACS Au ; 2(10): 2327-2338, 2022 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36311841

ABSTRACT

Confining Au nanoparticles (NPs) in a restricted space (e.g., zeolite micropores) is a promising way of overcoming their inherent thermal instability and susceptibility to aggregation, which limit catalytic applications. However, such approaches involve complex, multistep encapsulation processes. Here, we describe a successful strategy and its guiding principles for confining small (<2 nm) and monodisperse Au NPs within commercially available beta and MFI zeolites, which can oxidize CO at 40 °C and show size-selective catalysis. This protocol involves post-synthetic modification of the zeolite internal surface with thiol groups, which confines AuCl x species inside microporous frameworks during the activation process whereby Au precursors are converted into Au nanoparticles. The resulting beta and MFI zeolites contain uniformly dispersed Au NPs throughout the void space, indicating that the intrinsic stability of the framework promotes resistance to sintering. By contrast, in situ scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) studies evidenced that Au precursors in bare zeolites migrate from the matrix to the external surface during activation, thereby forming large and poorly dispersed agglomerates. Furthermore, the resistance of confined Au NPs against sintering is likely relevant to the intrinsic stability of the framework, supported by extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS), H2 chemisorption, and CO Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) studies. The Au NPs supported on commercial MFI maintain their uniform dispersity to a large extent after treatment at 700 °C that sinters Au clusters on mesoporous silicas or beta zeolites. Low-temperature CO oxidation and size-selective reactions highlight that most gold NPs are present inside the zeolite matrix with a diameter smaller than 2 nm. These findings illustrate how confinement favors small, uniquely stable, and monodisperse NPs, even for metals such as Au susceptible to cluster growth under conditions often required for catalytic use. Moreover, this strategy may be readily adapted to other zeolite frameworks that can be functionalized by thiol groups.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(45): 53925-53934, 2021 Nov 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34726376

ABSTRACT

Although low-cost, high-surface-area crystalline aluminosilicate zeolites have been recognized as promising adsorbents for the capture of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), their hydrophilic nature leads to a significant loss of performance owing to the ubiquitous presence of water vapor in the VOC stream. Herein, the aluminosilicate zeolites (i.e., mordenite and nanocrystalline ß) are functionalized via a solvothermal post-treatment with methyl iodide as the grafting agent. The methyl groups are primarily attached to the zeolite internal surface via covalent bonding between internal bridging O and -CH3, as evidenced by multiple analysis data. The static isotherms and diffusional studies clearly reveal a remarkable decrease in both the rate of water adsorption and the water affinity due to the attachment of methyl groups to the micropore walls, thus enhancing the water tolerance compared to that of pristine zeolites. In addition, CH3I-functionalized zeolites are investigated as adsorbents for the removal of benzene under dry and humid conditions, and their performance is compared to that of CH3Si(-OCH3)3-functionalized zeolites, wherein the methyl groups have been grafted onto the external surface. The results demonstrate that, although the benzene adsorption capacity under dry conditions is decreased upon internal surface functionalization, the loss of VOC adsorption capacity in the presence of H2O vapor is effectively prevented. By contrast, external surface functionalization is ineffective for preventing the negative effects of moisture upon the benzene adsorption capacity. As a result, CH3I-functionalized zeolites exhibit superior dynamic adsorption performance for benzene at 318 K under humid conditions (relative humidity: 80%), with a saturated adsorption capacity of 64.9 mg g-1. This work provides an easy strategy for tailoring the adsorption properties of aluminosilicate zeolites for adsorption/separation and other advanced applications.

4.
Adv Mater ; 33(48): e2105398, 2021 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34545976

ABSTRACT

Zeolite molecular sieves are widely used in gas separation and shape-selective catalysis, but these applications often require discriminating differences as little as 0.1 Å. Molecular sieving with such size selectivity demands zeolites with highly tunable pore diameters and adsorption properties, which are technically challenging to prepare. Nevertheless, it is shown that a wide range of organic functional groups can be covalently functionalized onto the interior pore walls of the zeolites, MOR, LTL, FAU, and MFI, to systematically "tune" their effective pore diameters with respect to the size of organic groups. For organic functionalization, small and aggressive organic electrophiles are used (e.g., organo-halide and -diazonium) as grafting agents, which are accessible to the intracrystalline void space, forming a C-Ozeolite bond in a reaction with a bridging oxygen as proved by multiple analysis data. It is demonstrated that the post-functionalization can be used to tailor the molecular sieving action of a parent zeolite to give size-selective adsorbents for light olefin/paraffin separations. 4-Methoxybenzene-functionalized MOR separates ethylene from ethane with an ideal-adsorbed-solution-theory selectivity of ≈5873, whereas toluene-grafted MOR completely separates propylene/propane mixtures. Therefore, tailoring the molecular-sieving properties of zeolites by organic functionalization broadens their applications to challenging separations.

5.
J Hazard Mater ; 403: 123659, 2021 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32829228

ABSTRACT

Zeolites have attracted great interest as an adsorbent for the removal of volatile organic compounds. However, they suffer from low adsorption capacities due to severe diffusion limitations. Here, the effects of zeolite thickness and mesopore architecture on dynamic adsorption of p-xylene have been examined with a number of MFI-type zeolites with different crystal thicknesses and mesopore openings (i.e. open mesopore, constricted mesopore), which were prepared via hydrothermal synthesis with various organic structure-directing agents and post-synthetic desilication. The results showed that the breakthrough time of MFI zeolite could be improved by more than 2.3 times by reducing the crystal thickness of zeolite to a single-unit-cell dimension (∼2 nm). The time improvement can be attributed to the short diffusion path length that results in easy access of p-xylene to intracrystalline micropores and a large external crystal surface area. In the case of mesopore openings, the presence of constricted mesopores caused the mass transfer of p-xylene into zeolite adsorbents to slow down while open mesopores did not. Furthermore, mesopore opening is an important factor for the desorption behavior of p-xylene. Adsorbed p-xylene by mesoporous zeolites could be desorbed at lower temperatures only when facile diffusion to the exterior through mesoporous channels was possible.

6.
Chem Soc Rev ; 49(23): 8584-8686, 2020 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33073812

ABSTRACT

Dramatically increased CO2 concentration from several point sources is perceived to cause severe greenhouse effect towards the serious ongoing global warming with associated climate destabilization, inducing undesirable natural calamities, melting of glaciers, and extreme weather patterns. CO2 capture and utilization (CCU) has received tremendous attention due to its significant role in intensifying global warming. Considering the lack of a timely review on the state-of-the-art progress of promising CCU techniques, developing an appropriate and prompt summary of such advanced techniques with a comprehensive understanding is necessary. Thus, it is imperative to provide a timely review, given the fast growth of sophisticated CO2 capture and utilization materials and their implementation. In this work, we critically summarized and comprehensively reviewed the characteristics and performance of both liquid and solid CO2 adsorbents with possible schemes for the improvement of their CO2 capture ability and advances in CO2 utilization. Their industrial applications in pre- and post-combustion CO2 capture as well as utilization were systematically discussed and compared. With our great effort, this review would be of significant importance for academic researchers for obtaining an overall understanding of the current developments and future trends of CCU. This work is bound to benefit researchers in fields relating to CCU and facilitate the progress of significant breakthroughs in both fundamental research and commercial applications to deliver perspective views for future scientific and industrial advances in CCU.

7.
Nature ; 585(7824): 221-224, 2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32908262

ABSTRACT

Platinum is a much used catalyst that, in petrochemical processes, is often alloyed with other metals to improve catalytic activity, selectivity and longevity1-5. Such catalysts are usually prepared in the form of metallic nanoparticles supported on porous solids, and their production involves reducing metal precursor compounds under a H2 flow at high temperatures6. The method works well when using easily reducible late transition metals, but Pt alloy formation with rare-earth elements through the H2 reduction route is almost impossible owing to the low chemical potential of rare-earth element oxides6. Here we use as support a mesoporous zeolite that has pore walls with surface framework defects (called 'silanol nests') and show that the zeolite enables alloy formation between Pt and rare-earth elements. We find that the silanol nests enable the rare-earth elements to exist as single atomic species with a substantially higher chemical potential compared with that of the bulk oxide, making it possible for them to diffuse onto Pt. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy and hydrogen chemisorption measurements indicate that the resultant bimetallic nanoparticles supported on the mesoporous zeolite are intermetallic compounds, which we find to be stable, highly active and selective catalysts for the propane dehydrogenation reaction. When used with late transition metals, the same preparation strategy produces Pt alloy catalysts that incorporate an unusually large amount of the second metal and, in the case of the PtCo alloy, show high catalytic activity and selectivity in the preferential oxidation of carbon monoxide in H2.

8.
J Chem Phys ; 151(23): 234716, 2019 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31864251

ABSTRACT

Platinum-based heterogeneous catalysts are mostly used in various commercial chemical processes because of their high catalytic activity, influenced by the metal/oxide interaction. To design rational catalysts with high performance, it is crucial to understand the relationship between the metal-oxide interface and the reaction pathway. Here, we investigate the role of oxygen defect sites in the reaction mechanism for CO oxidation using Pt nanoparticles supported on mesoporous TiO2 catalysts with oxygen defects. We show an intrinsic correlation between the catalytic reactivity and the local properties of titania with oxygen defects (i.e., Ti3+ sites). In situ infrared spectroscopy observations of the Pt/mesoporous TiO2-x catalyst indicate that an oxygen molecule bond can be activated at the perimeter between the Pt and an oxygen vacancy in TiO2 by neighboring CO molecules on the Pt surface before CO oxidation begins. The proposed reaction pathways for O2 activation at the Pt/TiO2-x interface based on density functional theory confirm our experimental findings. We suggest that this provides valuable insight into the intrinsic origin of the metal/support interaction influenced by the presence of oxygen vacancies, which clarifies the pivotal role played by the support.

9.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 53(27): 3810-3813, 2017 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28280828

ABSTRACT

A strategy for a high dispersion of metal/metal oxide nanoparticles in a mono-modal fashion is developed. The key is the functionalization of mesopore walls with basic -C3H6-N+(Me)3(OH)- groups. The supported metal catalysts obtained in the present work exhibit high catalytic activities for CO2 methanation at low temperature and CO oxidation.

10.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 54(43): 12805-8, 2015 Oct 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26302889

ABSTRACT

A microporous crystalline silica zeolite of the MEL structure type and three other zeolite analogues composed of germanosilicate frameworks were synthesized using tributylsulfonium, triphenylsulfonium, or tri(para-tolyl)sulfonium as the structure-directing agent. The germanosilicates thus obtained had ISV, ITT, or a new zeolite structure depending on the synthesis conditions. The structure of the new germanosilicate was solved using X-ray powder diffraction data with the aid of a charge-flipping method. The solution indicated a crystal structure belonging to the P63/mmc space group with cell parameters of a=16.2003 Šand c=21.8579 Å. After calcination, the new germanosilicate material exhibited two types of accessible micropores with diameters of 0.61 and 0.78 nm.

11.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 53(20): 5117-21, 2014 May 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24692040

ABSTRACT

A widely employed route for synthesizing mesostructured materials is the use of surfactant micelles or amphiphilic block copolymers as structure-directing agents. A versatile synthesis method is described for mesostructured materials composed of ultrathin inorganic frameworks using amorphous linear-chain polymers functionalized with a random distribution of side groups that can participate in inorganic crystallization. Tight binding of the side groups with inorganic species enforces strain in the polymer backbones, limiting the crystallization to the ultrathin micellar scale. This method is demonstrated for a variety of materials, such as hierarchically nanoporous zeolites, their aluminophosphate analogue, TiO2 nanosheets of sub-nanometer thickness, and mesoporous TiO2, SnO2, and ZrO2. This polymer-directed synthesis is expected to widen our accessibility to unexplored mesostructured materials in a simple and mass-producible manner.

12.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 50(32): 4175-7, 2014 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24633468

ABSTRACT

The synthesis of a mesoporous material with uniform mesopore diameters and crystalline MFI zeolite walls has been achieved, simply by seeding the multiammonium surfactant-directed synthesis with bulk zeolite crystals. The bulk seeds disappeared in the final product. As a result of seeding, the mesoporous zeolites could be generated rapidly even at high Al content.

13.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 52(38): 10014-7, 2013 Sep 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23913751

ABSTRACT

Multiammonium surfactants exhibited a remarkable capping effect for zeolite synthesis in the forms of nanoparticles, nanorods, and nanosponges in cases where common monovalent surfactants failed. A nanorod-shaped mordenite zeolite synthesized in this manner showed significantly enhanced catalytic lifetimes in acid-catalyzed cumene synthesis reactions.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(24): 8806-9, 2013 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23731379

ABSTRACT

Multiamines with amphiphilic structures have been synthesized to serve as simultaneous structure-directing agents in micro- and meso-structural levels for aluminophosphate materials (AlPOs) and their analogues, such as silicoaluminophosphate, cobalt aluminophosphate, and gallium phosphate. The amine molecules are assembled into a micelle with a specific morphology to function as a meso-level structure director. Individual amine groups in the micelle are able to direct the formation of microporous crystalline AlPO structure. The resultant meso-level morphologies of the AlPOs are typically nanosheets of uniform thickness, which can be tailored in the range of 2-5 nm by the number of amine groups. Sponge-like disordered mesoporous morphologies can be generated, depending on the amine structures. Using such multiamines provides a versatile route to various phosphate materials with a structural hierarchy for enhanced porous functionalities.

15.
Science ; 333(6040): 328-32, 2011 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21764745

ABSTRACT

Crystalline mesoporous molecular sieves have long been sought as solid acid catalysts for organic reactions involving large molecules. We synthesized a series of mesoporous molecular sieves that possess crystalline microporous walls with zeolitelike frameworks, extending the application of zeolites to the mesoporous range of 2 to 50 nanometers. Hexagonally ordered or disordered mesopores are generated by surfactant aggregates, whereas multiple cationic moieties in the surfactant head groups direct the crystallization of microporous aluminosilicate frameworks. The wall thicknesses, framework topologies, and mesopore sizes can be controlled with different surfactants. The molecular sieves are highly active as catalysts for various acid-catalyzed reactions of bulky molecular substrates, compared with conventional zeolites and ordered mesoporous amorphous materials.

16.
Inorg Chem ; 49(11): 4881-94, 2010 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20420417

ABSTRACT

We have synthesized and fully characterized three novel, yet closely related, heterocyclically meso-substituted (BODIPY) fluorophores 4,4-difluoro-8-(C(4)H(3)X)-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene (X = O, 2-/3-furyl (7/10); Se, 2-selenenyl (9)) through the use of 2-D NMR (COSY, HSQC, and HMBC), single crystal X-ray diffraction, mass spectrometry, elemental analysis, UV-vis spectroscopy, and fluorescent decay lifetimes, for comparison to the previously reported thienyl species (X = S, 2-/3-thienyl (8/11)). Specifically, 7-11 differ formally by chalcogen (O, S, or Se) or chalcogen placement. Solid state comparisons reveal major effects stemming from subtle structural differences which allows for insights into fluorescent crystal engineering. For the 2-heteroatom substitution, an increase in molecular weight (7 < 8 < 9) correlates with an increasing unit cell-volume, a greater orthogonality for the C(4)H(3)X group, and a lower value for Phi(F). Solution and density functional theory (DFT) results reveal interesting platforms for potential in fluorescent studies for neurology. 2-Heterocyclic species show larger lambda(abs,max/em,max) values relative to 3-heterocyclic ones, based on electron withdrawing effects. 10 has the greatest Phi(F) value herein (0.25, toluene). Fluorescence lifetimes were found to be 2.60 (7), 0.74 (8), 0.27 (9), 4.26 (10), and 1.86 ns (11); lambda(em,max) decay was studied for 8. Heterocyclic differences give rise to somewhat different pyrrolic NMR spectroscopic shifts as well. These compounds resist decomposition as seen from titrations with H(2)O(2), and uniformly undergo lambda(abs,max) red-shifting and lowered Phi(F) values as they become brominated with Br(2).


Subject(s)
Boron Compounds/chemistry , Heterocyclic Compounds/chemistry , Boron Compounds/chemical synthesis , Crystallography, X-Ray , Heterocyclic Compounds/chemical synthesis , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Photochemistry
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