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1.
Cryst Growth Des ; 24(6): 2406-2414, 2024 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38525100

ABSTRACT

The morphology of zeolite crystals strongly affects their textural, catalytic, and mechanical attributes. However, controlling zeolite crystal morphology without using modifiers or structure-directing agents remains a challenging task because of our limited understanding of the relationships between zeolite crystal shape, crystallization mechanism, and composition of the starting synthesis mixture. In this study, we aimed at developing a general method for controlling the morphology of zeolites by assessing the impact of the Si/T molar ratio of the synthesis gel on the growth rate of zeolite crystals in various crystallographic directions and on the final crystal morphology of the UTL germanosilicate with a 2D system of intersecting 14- and 12-ring pores. Our results showed that flat UTL crystals progressively thicken with the Si/Ge molar ratio, demonstrating that Ge concentration controls the relative rate of crystal growth in the perpendicular direction to the pore system. The morphology of other zeolites and zeotypes with an anisotropic structure, including AFI (12R), IFR (12R), MWW (10-10R), and IWW (12-10-8R), can also be predicted based on their Si/T ratio, suggesting a systematic pattern across zeolite structures and in a wide range of zeolite framework elements. Combined, these findings introduce a facile and cost-efficient method for directly controlling crystal morphology of zeolites with anisotropic structures with a high potential for scale-up while providing further insights into the role of elemental composition in zeolite crystal growth.

2.
J Mater Chem A Mater ; 12(2): 802-812, 2024 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38178865

ABSTRACT

Zeolites have been well known for decades as catalytic materials and adsorbents and are traditionally prepared using the bottom-up synthesis method. Although it was productive for more than 250 zeolite frameworks, the conventional solvothermal synthesis approach provided limited control over the structural characteristics of the formed materials. In turn, the discovery and development of the Assembly-Disassembly-Organization-Reassembly (ADOR) strategy for the regioselective manipulation of germanosilicates enabled the synthesis of previously unattainable zeolites with predefined structures. To date, the family tree of ADOR materials has included the topological branches of UTL, UOV, IWW, *CTH, and IWV zeolites. Herein, we report on the expansion of ADOR zeolites with a new branch related to the IWR topology, which is yet unattainable experimentally but theoretically predicted as highly promising adsorbents for CO2 separation applications. The optimization of not only the chemical composition but also the dimensions of the crystalline domain in the parent IWR zeolite in the Assembly step was found to be the key to the success of its ADOR transformation into previously unknown IPC-17 zeolite with an intersecting 12 × 8 × 8-ring pore system. The structure of the as-prepared IPC-17 zeolite was verified by a combination of microscopic and diffraction techniques, while the results on the epichlorohydrin ring-opening with alcohols of variable sizes proved the molecular sieving ability of IPC-17 with potential application in heterogeneous catalysis. The proposed synthesis strategy may facilitate the discovery of zeolite materials that are difficult or yet impossible to achieve using a traditional bottom-up synthesis approach.

3.
Adv Mater ; 36(4): e2307341, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37800413

ABSTRACT

Zeolites are highly efficient industrial catalysts and sorbents with microporous framework structures. Approximately 10% of the frameworks, but eventually all in the long run, have produced both 3D crystals and 2D layers. The latter can be intercalated and expanded like all 2D materials but proved difficult to exfoliate directly into suspensions of monolayers in solution as precursors for unique synthetic opportunities. Successful exfoliations have been reported recently and are overviewed in this perspective article. The discussion highlights 3 primary challenges in this field, namely finding suitable 2D zeolite preparations that exfoliate directly in high yield, proving uniform layer thickness in solution and identifying applications to exploit the unique synthetic capabilities and properties of exfoliated zeolite monolayers. Four zeolites have been confirmed to exfoliate directly into monolayers: 3 with known structures-MWW, MFI, and RWR and one unknown, bifer with a unit cell close to ferrierite. The exfoliation into monolayers is confirmed by the combination of 5-6 characterization techniques including AFM, in situ and in-plane XRD, and microscopies. The promising areas of development are oriented films and membranes, intimately mixed zeolite phases, and hierarchical nanoscale composites with other active species like nanoparticles and clusters that are unfeasible by solid state processes.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(16): 9081-9091, 2023 Apr 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37040083

ABSTRACT

Zeolites are key materials in both basic research and industrial applications. However, their synthesis is neither diverse nor applicable to labile frameworks because classical procedures require harsh hydrothermal conditions, whereas post-synthesis methods are limited to a few suitable parent materials. Remaining frameworks can fail due to amorphization, dissolution, and other decomposition processes. Nevertheless, stopping degradation at intermediate structures could yield new zeolites. Here, by optimizing the design and synthesis parameters of the parent zeolite IWV, we "caught" a new, highly crystalline, and siliceous zeolite during its degradation. IWV seed-assisted crystallization followed by gentle transformation into the water-alcohol system yielded the highly crystalline daughter zeolite IPC-20, whose structure was solved by precession-assisted three-dimensional electron diffraction. Without additional requirements, as in conventional (direct or post-synthesis) strategies, our approach may be applied to any chemically labile material with a staged structure.

5.
RSC Adv ; 13(13): 8942, 2023 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36936822

ABSTRACT

Professor RNDr. Petr Nachtigall, PhD passed away on 28 December 2022. He was an internationally recognized expert in computational materials science; working at Charles University in the Department of Physical and Macromolecular Chemistry. We honor his memory.

6.
Chem Rev ; 123(3): 877-917, 2023 Feb 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36547404

ABSTRACT

Metal substitution of molecular sieve systems is a major driving force in developing novel catalytic processes to meet current demands of green chemistry concepts and to achieve sustainability in the chemical industry and in other aspects of our everyday life. The advantages of metal-substituted molecular sieves include high surface areas, molecular sieving effects, confinement effects, and active site and morphology variability and stability. The present review aims to comprehensively and critically assess recent advances in the area of tetra- (Ti, Sn, Zr, Hf) and pentavalent (V, Nb, Ta) metal-substituted molecular sieves, which are mainly characterized for their Lewis acidic active sites. Metal oxide molecular sieve materials with properties similar to those of zeolites and siliceous molecular sieve systems are also discussed, in addition to relevant studies on metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and some composite MOF systems. In particular, this review focuses on (i) synthesis aspects determining active site accessibility and local environment; (ii) advances in active site characterization and, importantly, quantification; (iii) selective redox and isomerization reaction applications; and (iv) photoelectrocatalytic applications.

7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(1): e202213361, 2023 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36342499

ABSTRACT

Supported metal nanoparticles are used as heterogeneous catalysts but often deactivated due to sintering at high temperatures. Confining metal species into a porous matrix reduces sintering, yet supports rarely provide additional stabilization. Here, we used the silanol-rich layered zeolite IPC-1P to stabilize ultra-small Rh nanoparticles. By adjusting the IPC-1P interlayer space through swelling, we prepared various architectures, including microporous and disordered mesoporous. In situ scanning transmission electron microscopy confirmed that Rh nanoparticles are resistant to sintering at high temperature (750 °C, 6 hrs). Rh clusters strongly bind to surface silanol quadruplets at IPC-1P layers by hydrogen transfer to clusters, while high silanol density hinders their migration based on density functional theory calculations. Ultimately, combining swelling with long-chain surfactant and utilizing metal-silanol interactions resulted in a novel, catalytically active material-Rh@IPC_C22.

8.
Chemistry ; 28(35): e202201468, 2022 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35616147

ABSTRACT

Invited for the cover of this issue are Maksym Opanasenko and co-workers at Charles University in Prague, IKTS and deepXscan GmbH in Dresden. The image depicts a controllable crystallization mechanism that can be switched from classical to reversed crystal growth by manipulating the interplay between silica particles and the structure-directing agent. Read the full text of the article at 10.1002/chem.202200590.

9.
Chemistry ; 28(35): e202200590, 2022 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35439329

ABSTRACT

Crystal growth mechanisms govern a wide range of properties of crystalline materials. Reversed crystal growth is one of the nonclassical mechanisms observed in many materials. However, the reversed crystallization starting from amorphous aggregates and the key factors driving this growth remain elusive. Here, we describe a characteristic model of reversed crystal growth representing the inner structure and crystallinity development of aggregates studied by microscopy and nano X-ray computed tomography. By adjusting the synthesis conditions, the fundamental function of the structure-directing agent, which determines the crystallization pathway, was revealed. As a result, the crystal growth mode can be "switched" from the classical route at a low ratio of SDA/framework elements to reversed growth at a high ratio. Our findings provide further insights into crystal growth control, which is crucial for improving synthesis protocols and designing various forms of crystalline materials.

10.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(8): 10428-10437, 2022 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35171567

ABSTRACT

Palladium nanoparticles entrapped in porous aromatic frameworks (PAFs) or covalent organic frameworks may promote heterogeneous catalytic reactions. However, preparing such materials as active nanocatalysts usually requires additional steps for palladium entrapment and reduction. This paper reports as a new approach, a simple procedure leading to the self-entrapment of Pd nanoparticles within the PAF structure. Thus, the selected Sonogashira synthesis affords PAF-entrapped Pd nanoparticles that can catalyze the C-C Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reactions. Following this new concept, PAFs were synthesized via Sonogashira cross-coupling of the tetraiodurated derivative of tetraphenyladamantane or spiro-9,9'-bifluorene with 1,6-diethynylpyrene, then characterized them using powder X-ray diffraction, diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy, and textural properties (i.e., adsorption-desorption isotherms). The PAF-entrapped Pd nanocatalysts showed high catalytic activity in Suzuki-Miyaura coupling reactions (demonstrated by preserving the turnover frequency values) and stability (demonstrated by palladium leaching and recycling experiments). This new approach presents a new class of PAFs with unique structural, topological, and compositional complexities as entrapped metal nanocatalysts or for other diverse applications.

11.
Mater Adv ; 2(12): 3862-3870, 2021 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34223168

ABSTRACT

The assembly-disassembly-organisation-reassembly (ADOR) process has led to the discovery of numerous zeolite structures, albeit limited to materials with decreased pore size in relation to the parent germanosilicate zeolite. This limitation stems from the rapid decrease in d-spacing upon hydrolysis (disassembly). Nevertheless, we have artificially increased the d-spacing of layered IPC-1P by intercalating organic species. Furthermore, we have reconstructed double four rings (D4R) between layers, thus transforming IPC-1P back into the parent UTL zeolite. This reconstruction has provided not only germanosilicate but also a new, high-silica UTL zeolite (Si/Ge = 481). Therefore, our "reverse ADOR" opens up new synthetic routes towards promising extra-large-pore zeolite-based materials with new chemical compositions.

12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(29): 11052-11062, 2021 Jul 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34264655

ABSTRACT

Direct exfoliation of layered zeolites into solutions of monolayers has remained unresolved since the 1990s. Recently, zeolite MCM-56 with the MWW topology (layers denoted mww) has been exfoliated directly in high yield by soft-chemical treatment with tetrabutylammonium hydroxide (TBAOH). This has enabled preparation of zeolite-based hierarchical materials and intimate composites with other active species that are unimaginable via the conventional solid-state routes. The extension to other frameworks, which provides broader benefits, diversified activity, and functionality, is not routine and requires finding suitable synthesis formulations, viz. compositions and conditions, of the layered zeolites themselves. This article reports exfoliation and characterization of layers with ferrierite-related structure, denoted bifer, having rectangular lattice constants like those of the FER and CDO zeolites, and thickness of approximately 2 nm, which is twice that of the so-called fer layer. Several techniques were combined to prove the exfoliation, supported by simulations: AFM; in-plane, in situ, and powder X-ray diffraction; TEM; and SAED. The results confirmed (i) the structure and crystallinity of the layers without unequivocal differentiation between the FER and CDO topologies and (ii) uniform thickness in solution (monodispersity), ruling out significant multilayered particles and other impurities. The bifer layers are zeolitic with Brønsted acid sites, demonstrated catalytic activity in the alkylation of mesitylene with benzyl alcohol, and intralayer pores visible in TEM. The practical benefits are demonstrated by the preparation of unprecedented intimately mixed zeolite composites with the mww, with activity greater than the sum of the components despite high content of inert silica as pillars.

13.
Adv Mater ; 32(44): e2003264, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32780912

ABSTRACT

Zeolites are among the most environmentally friendly materials produced industrially at the Megaton scale. They find numerous commercial applications, particularly in catalysis, adsorption, and separation. Under ambient conditions aluminosilicate zeolites are stable when exposed to water or water vapor. However, at extreme conditions as high temperature, high water vapor pressure or increased acidity/basicity, their crystalline framework can be destroyed. The stability of the zeolite framework under aqueous conditions also depends on the concentration and character of heteroatoms (other than Al) and the topology of the zeolite. The factors critical for zeolite (in)stability in the presence of water under various conditions are reviewed from the experimental as well as computational sides. Nonreactive and reactive interactions of water with zeolites are addressed. The goal of this review is to provide a comparative overview of all-silica zeolites, aluminosilicates and zeolites with other heteroatoms (Ti, Sn, and Ge) when contacted with water. Due attention is also devoted to the situation when partial zeolite hydrolysis is used beneficially, such as the formation of hierarchical zeolites, synthesis of new zeolites or fine-tuning catalytic or adsorption characteristics of zeolites.

14.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(44): 19380-19389, 2020 Oct 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32510709

ABSTRACT

Zeolites are one of the most important heterogeneous catalysts, with a high number of large-scale industrial applications. While the synthesis of new zeolites remain rather limited, introduction of germanium has substantially increased our ability to not only direct the synthesis of zeolites but also to convert them into new materials post-synthetically. The smaller Ge-O-Ge angles (vs. Si-O-Si) and lability of the Ge-O bonds in aqueous solutions account for this behaviour. This Minireview discusses critical aspects of germanosilicate synthesis and their post-synthesis transformations to porous materials.

15.
Dalton Trans ; 49(18): 5832-5841, 2020 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32301456

ABSTRACT

We report the hydrothermal synthesis and characterization of two uranyl-oxide hydroxy-hydrate compounds with Pr(iii) (U-Pr) and Tb(iii) (U-Tb) ions prepared via direct hydrothermal reactions of lanthanide (Ln = Pr or Tb) ions with a uranyl-oxide hydroxy-hydrate phase, schoepite. Both compounds U-Pr and U-Tb show thin plate morphologies with atomic ratios of 2 (U : Pr) and 6 (U : Tb) and have been characterized by multiple techniques. The layered structures with interlayer hydrated Pr(iii) or Tb(iii) ions formed via uranyl-Pr/Tb interactions have been confirmed by synchrotron single crystal X-ray diffraction studies. In addition, the evolution of the uranyl oxide hydroxide layers and anion topologies upon increasing the concentration of interlayer cations by using different U : Ln (Ln = Pr or Tb) ratios has been discussed. The success in the preparation and characterization of compounds U-Pr and U-Tb with different U : Ln (Ln = Pr or Tb) ratios highlights the flexibility of the uranyl oxide hydroxide layers with respect to the incorporation of interlayer cations via a gradual hydroxyl to oxo transition. The study has direct implications in regard to the natural weathering of uraninite mineral and the alteration of spent nuclear fuels during the long-term geological disposal.

16.
Sci Adv ; 6(12): eaay8163, 2020 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32219163

ABSTRACT

The most effective approach to practical exploitation of the layered solids that often have unique valuable properties-such as graphene, clays, and other compounds-is by dispersion into colloidal suspensions of monolayers, called liquid exfoliation. This fundamentally expected behavior can be used to deposit monolayers on supports or to reassemble into hierarchical materials to produce, by design, catalysts, nanodevices, films, drug delivery systems, and other products. Zeolites have been known as extraordinary catalysts and sorbents with three-dimensional structures but emerged as an unexpected new class of layered solids contributing previously unknown valuable features: catalytically active layers with pores inside or across. The self-evident question of layered zeolite exfoliation has remained unresolved for three decades. Here, we report the first direct exfoliation of zeolites into suspension of monolayers as proof of the concept, which enables diverse applications including membranes and hierarchical catalysts with improved access.

17.
RSC Adv ; 10(53): 31947-31960, 2020 Aug 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35518170

ABSTRACT

The determination of the full crystal structure of the uranyl sulfate mineral uranopilite, (UO2)6(SO4)O2(OH)6·14H2O, including the positions of the hydrogen atoms within the corresponding unit cell, has not been feasible to date due to the poor quality of its X-ray diffraction pattern. In this paper, the complete crystal structure of uranopilite is established for the first time by means of first principles solid-state calculations based in density functional theory employing a large plane wave basis set and pseudopotential functions. The computed unit-cell parameters and structural data for the non-hydrogen atoms are in excellent agreement with the available experimental data. The computed X-ray diffraction pattern is also in satisfactory agreement with the experimental pattern. The infrared spectrum of uranopilite is collected from a natural crystal specimen originating in Jáchymov (Czech Republic) and computed employing density functional perturbation theory. The theoretical and experimental vibrational spectra are highly consistent. Therefore, a full assignment of the bands in the experimental infrared spectrum is performed using a normal mode analysis of the first principles vibrational results. One overtone and six combination bands are recognized in the infrared spectrum. The elasticity tensor and phonon spectra of uranopilite are computed from the optimized crystal structure and used to analyze its mechanical stability, to obtain a rich set of elastic properties and to derive its fundamental thermodynamic properties as a function of temperature. Uranopilite is shown to have a large mechanical anisotropy and to exhibit the negative Poisson's ratio and negative linear compressibility phenomena. The calculated specific heat and entropy at 298.15 K are 179.6 and 209.0 J K-1 mol-1, respectively. The computed fundamental thermodynamic functions of uranopilite are employed to obtain its thermodynamic functions of formation in terms of the elements and the thermodynamic properties of a set of chemical reactions relating uranopilite with a representative group of secondary phases of spent nuclear fuel. From the reaction thermodynamic data, the relative stability of uranopilite with respect to these secondary phases is evaluated as a function of temperature and under different hydrogen peroxide concentrations. From the results, it follows that uranopilite has a very large thermodynamic stability in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. The high stability of uranopilite under this condition justify its early crystallization in the paragenetic sequence of secondary phases occurring when uranium dioxide is exposed to sulfur-rich solutions.

18.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 5129, 2019 11 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31719520

ABSTRACT

Owing to the significant difference in the numbers of simulated and experimentally feasible zeolite structures, several alternative strategies have been developed for zeolite synthesis. Despite their rationality and originality, most of these techniques are based on trial-and-error, which makes it difficult to predict the structure of new materials. Assembly-Disassembly-Organization-Reassembly (ADOR) method overcoming this limitation was successfully applied to a limited number of structures with relatively stable crystalline layers (UTL, UOV, *CTH). Here, we report a straightforward, vapour-phase-transport strategy for the transformation of IWW zeolite with low-density silica layers connected by labile Ge-rich units into material with new topology. In situ XRD and XANES studies on the mechanism of IWW rearrangement reveal an unusual structural distortion-reconstruction of the framework throughout the process. Therefore, our findings provide a step forward towards engineering nanoporous materials and increasing the number of zeolites available for future applications.

19.
Chemistry ; 25(63): 14430-14440, 2019 Nov 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31478582

ABSTRACT

The successful synthesis of hierarchically structured titanium silicalite-1 (TS-1) with large intracrystalline macropores by steam-assisted crystallisation of mesoporous silica particles is reported. The macropore topology was imaged in 3D by using electron tomography and synchrotron radiation-based ptychographic X-ray computed tomography, revealing interconnected macropores within the crystals accounting for about 30 % of the particle volume. The study of the macropore formation mechanism revealed that the mesoporous silica particles act as a sacrificial macropore template during the synthesis. Silicon-to-titanium ratio of the macroporous TS-1 samples was successfully tuned from 100 to 44. The hierarchically structured TS-1 exhibited high activity in the liquid phase epoxidation of 2-octene with hydrogen peroxide. The hierarchically structured TS-1 surpassed a conventional nano-sized TS-1 sample in terms of alkene conversion and showed comparable selectivity to the epoxide. The flexible synthesis route described here can be used to prepare hierarchical zeolites with improved mass transport properties for other selective oxidation reactions.

20.
Inorg Chem ; 58(16): 10812-10821, 2019 Aug 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31373489

ABSTRACT

We have synthesized two uranyl oxide hydrate (UOH) phases incorporating La(III) or Nd(III) ions under hydrothermal conditions. Investigations with scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) revealed thin-plate morphologies with a U-to-Ln atomic ratio of 2:1 (Ln = La or Nd), while single-crystal X-ray diffraction and TEM electron diffraction studies confirmed that both UOH phases crystallized in the trigonal P31m space group with uranyl oxide layered structures incorporating La(III)/Nd(III) ions as interlayer species. Vibrational spectroscopic studies revealed typical vibrational modes for U ions, with the derived U═O bond lengths being comparable to the values reported on other UOH phases. Bond-valence-sum calculations suggest hexavalent uranium in the uranyl form, which was confirmed by the results of diffuse-reflectance and X-ray absorption near-edge structure spectroscopies. This work reports the first single-crystal structural investigation of UOH phases with Ln ions, which has significant implications in the weathering products of uraninite mineral in nature as well as the alteration products of spent nuclear fuels during interim storage and safe disposal over geological timespans.

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