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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(6): e202306033, 2024 Feb 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37782261

RESUMO

The structural and morphological characterization of individual catalyst particles for olefin polymerization, as well as for the reverse process of polyolefin decomposition, can provide an improved understanding for how these catalyst materials operate under relevant reaction conditions. In this review, we discuss an emerging analytical toolbox of 2D and 3D chemical imaging techniques that is suitable for investigating the chemistry and reactivity of related catalyst systems. While synchrotron-based X-ray microscopy still provides unparalleled spatial resolutions in 2D and 3D, a number of laboratory-based techniques, most notably focused ion beam-scanning electron microscopy, confocal fluorescence microscopy, infrared photoinduced force microscopy and laboratory-based X-ray nano-computed tomography, have helped to significantly expand the arsenal of analytical tools available to scientists in heterogeneous catalysis and polymer science. In terms of future research, the review outlines the role and impact of in situ and operando (spectro-)microscopy experiments, involving sophisticated reactors as well as online reactant and product analysis, to obtain real-time information on the formation, decomposition, and mobility of polymer phases within single catalyst particles. Furthermore, the potential of fluorescence microscopy, X-ray microscopy and optical microscopy is highlighted for the high-throughput characterization of olefin polymerization and polyolefin decomposition catalysts. By combining these chemical imaging techniques with, for example, chemical staining methodologies, selective probe molecules as well as particle sorting approaches, representative structure-activity relationships can be derived at the level of single catalyst particles.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(4): e202314528, 2024 Jan 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38037863

RESUMO

Porous solids often contain complex pore networks with pores of various sizes. Tracking individual fluorescent probes as they diffuse through porous materials can be used to characterize pore networks at tens of nanometers resolution. However, understanding the motion behavior of fluorescent probes in confinement is crucial to reliably derive pore network properties. Here, we introduce well-defined lithography-made model pores developed to study probe behavior in confinement. We investigated the influence of probe-host interactions on diffusion and trapping of confined single-emitter quantum-dot probes. Using the pH-responsiveness of the probes, we were able to largely suppress trapping at the pore walls. This enabled us to define experimental conditions for mapping of the accessible pore space of a one-dimensional pore array as well as a real-life polymerization-catalyst-support particle.

4.
Chem Sci ; 14(37): 10068-10080, 2023 Sep 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37772101

RESUMO

Catalytic cracking is a promising approach to chemically recycle polyolefins by converting them into smaller hydrocarbons like naphtha, and important precursors of various platform chemicals, such as aromatics. Cracking catalysts, commonly used in the modern refinery and petrochemical industry, are tailored to process gaseous or liquid feedstock. Polyolefins, however, are very large macromolecules that form highly viscous melts at the temperatures required to break their backbone C-C bonds. Therefore, mass transport is expected to limit the performance of traditional cracking catalysts when applied to the conversion of polymers. In this work, we study these effects during the cracking of polypropylene (PP) over catalysts utilized in the fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) process. Thermogravimetric experiments using PP of varying molecular weight (Mw) and catalysts of varying accessibility showed that low Mw model polymers can be cracked below 275 °C, while PP of higher Mw required a 150 °C higher temperature. We propose that this difference is linked to different degrees of mass transport limitations and investigated this at length scales ranging from milli- to nanometers, utilizing in situ optical microscopy and electron microscopy to inspect cut open catalyst-polymer composites. We identified the main cause of transport limitations as the significantly higher melt viscosity of high Mw polymers, which prohibits efficient catalyst-polymer contact. Additionally, the high Mw polymer does not enter the inner pore system of the catalyst particles, severely limiting utilization of the active sites located there. Our results demonstrate that utilizing low Mw polymers can lead to a significant overestimation of catalyst activity, and suggest that polyolefins might need to undergo a viscosity reducing pre-treatment in order to be cracked efficiently.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(46): 21287-21294, 2022 11 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36346832

RESUMO

To optimize the performance of supported olefin polymerization catalysts, novel methodologies are required to evaluate the composition, structure, and morphology of both pristine and prepolymerized samples in a resource-efficient, high-throughput manner. Here, we report on a unique combination of laboratory-based confocal fluorescence microscopy and advanced image processing that allowed us to quantitatively assess support fragmentation in a large number of autofluorescent metallocene-based catalyst particles. Using this approach, significant inter- and intraparticle heterogeneities were detected and quantified in a representative number of prepolymerized catalyst particles (2D: ≥135, 3D: 40). The heterogeneity that was observed over several stages of slurry-phase ethylene polymerization (10 bar) is primarily attributed to the catalyst particles' diverse support structures and to the inhomogeneities in the metallocene distribution. From a mechanistic point of view, the 2D and 3D analyses revealed extensive contributions from a layer-by-layer fragmentation mechanism in synergy with a less pronounced sectioning mechanism. A significant number of catalyst particles were also found to display limited support fragmentation at the onset of the reaction (i.e., at lower polymer yields). This delay in activity or "dormancy" is believed to contribute to a broadening of the particle size distribution during the early stages of polymerization. 2D and 3D catalyst screening via confocal fluorescence microscopy represents an accessible and fast approach to characterize the structure of heterogeneous catalysts and assess the distribution of their fluorescent components and reaction products. The automation of both image segmentation and postprocessing with machine learning can yield a powerful diagnostic tool for future research as well as quality control on industrial catalysts.


Assuntos
Alcenos , Polimerização , Alcenos/química , Metalocenos , Catálise , Microscopia de Fluorescência
6.
JACS Au ; 1(11): 1996-2008, 2021 Nov 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35574041

RESUMO

Kinetics-based differences in the early stage fragmentation of two structurally analogous silica-supported hafnocene- and zirconocene-based catalysts were observed during gas-phase ethylene polymerization at low pressures. A combination of focused ion beam-scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM) and nanoscale infrared photoinduced force microscopy (IR PiFM) revealed notable differences in the distribution of the support, polymer, and composite phases between the two catalyst materials. By means of time-resolved probe molecule infrared spectroscopy, correlations between this divergence in morphology and the kinetic behavior of the catalysts' active sites were established. The rate of polymer formation, a property that is inherently related to a catalyst's kinetics and the applied reaction conditions, ultimately governs mass transfer and thus the degree of homogeneity achieved during support fragmentation. In the absence of strong mass transfer limitations, a layer-by-layer mechanism dominates at the level of the individual catalyst support domains under the given experimental conditions.

7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(35): 14921-14926, 2020 Aug 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32364281

RESUMO

Structural dynamics of a Mn-Na2 WO4 /SiO2 catalyst were detected directly under reaction conditions during the oxidative coupling of methane via in situ XRD and operando Raman spectroscopy. A new concept of fluctuating storage and release of an active phase in heterogeneous catalysis is proposed that involves the transient generation of active sodium oxide species via a reversible reaction of Na2 WO4 with Mn7 SiO12 . The process is enabled by phase transitions and melting at the high reaction temperatures that are typically applied.

8.
IUCrJ ; 4(Pt 3): 202-203, 2017 May 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28512566

RESUMO

Three polymorphs of a di-chloro-N-salicylideneaniline derivative show visually impressive jumping and sudden blasting behaviours on heating due to phase transitions.

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