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1.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 9(4): e2104414, 2022 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35112814

ABSTRACT

This paper deals with the synthesis conditions-defect formation relationship in zeolites. Silicalite-1 (MFI-type) is used as a model material. Samples synthesized from a system with high basicity (at 100 °C), a system with moderate basicity (at 150 °C), and a fluoride-containing system in neutral medium (at 170 °C) are compared. Well-crystallized materials with sizes ≈0.1, 1-10, and 30-40 µm are obtained. The samples are analyzed by complementary methods providing information on the short- and long-range order in the zeolite framework. A strong correlation between the number of point defects in the zeolite framework and preparation conditions is established. Silicalite-1 synthesized under mild synthesis conditions from a highly basic system exhibits a larger number of framework defects and thus low hydrophobicity. Further, the calcined samples are subjected to aluminum and silicon incorporation by postsynthesis treatment. The Al/Si incorporation in the zeolite framework and its impact on the physicochemical properties is studied by XRD, TEM/SEM, solid-state NMR, FTIR, and thermogravimetric analyses. The defects healing as a function of the number of point defects in the initial material and zeolite crystal size is evaluated. The results of this study will serve for fine-tuning zeolite properties by in situ and postsynthesis methods.

2.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 604: 350-357, 2021 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34273779

ABSTRACT

A clear understanding of the crystal formation pathways of zeolites remains one of the most challenging issues to date. Here we investigate the synthesis of nanosized chabazite (CHA) zeolites using organic template-free colloidal suspensions by varying the time of aging at room temperature and the time of hydrothermal treatment at 90 °C. The role of mixed alkali metal cations (Na+, K+, Cs+) on the formation of CHA in the colloidal suspensions was studied. Increasing the aging time of the precursor colloidal suspension from 4 to 17 days resulted in faster crystallization of CHA nanocrystals (3 h instead of 7 h at 90 °C) to afford significantly smaller particles (60 nm vs 600 nm). During the crystallization a considerable change in the content of inorganic cations in the recovered solid material was observed to coincide with the formation of the CHA nanocrystals. The Na+ cations were found to direct the formation of condensed and pre-shaped aluminosilicate particles in the colloidal precursor suspensions, while K+ cations facilitated the formation of secondary building units (SBUs) of the CHA type framework structure such as d6r and cha cages, and the Cs+ cations promoted the long-range crystalline order facilitating the crystallization of stable zeolite nanocrystals.

3.
Chemphyschem ; 21(16): 1873-1881, 2020 Aug 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32176421

ABSTRACT

We outline two methodologies to selectively characterize the Brønsted acidity of the external surface of FAU-type zeolites by IR and NMR spectroscopy of adsorbed basic probe molecules. The challenge and goal are to develop reliable and quantitative IR and NMR methodologies to investigate the accessibility of acidic sites in the large pore FAU-type zeolite Y and its mesoporous derivatives often referred to as ultra-stable Y (USY). The accessibility of their Brønsted acid sites to probe molecules (n-alkylamines, n-alkylpyridines, n-alkylphosphine- and phenylphosphine-oxides) of different molecular sizes is quantitatively monitored either by IR or 31 P NMR spectroscopy. It is now possible, for the first time to quantitatively discriminate between the Brønsted acidity located in the microporosity and on the external surface of large pore zeolites. For instance, the number of external acid sites on a Y (LZY-64) zeolite represents 2 % of its total acid sites while that of a USY (CBV760) represents 4 % while the latter has a much lower framework Si/Al ratio.

4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(15): 6284-6288, 2020 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31986232

ABSTRACT

Thin membranes (900 nm) were prepared by direct transformation of infiltrated amorphous precursor nanoparticles, impregnated in a graphene oxide (GO) matrix, into hydroxy sodalite (SOD) nanocrystals. The amorphous precursor particles rich in silanols (Si-OH) enhanced the interactions with the GO, thus leading to the formation of highly adhesive and stable SOD/GO membranes via strong bonding. The cross-linking of SOD nanoparticles with the GO in the membranes promoted both the high gas permeance and enhanced selectivity towards H2 from a mixture containing CO2 and H2 O. The SOD/GO membranes are moisture resistance and exhibit steady separation performance (H2 permeance of about 4900 GPU and H2 /CO2 selectivity of 56, with no degradation in performance during the test of 50 h) at high temperature (200 °C) under water vapor (4 mol %).

5.
Nanoscale Adv ; 1(5): 2029-2039, 2019 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36134217

ABSTRACT

Zeolites and related crystalline molecular sieves are utilised in a wide range of reactions and processes due to their regular microporous structure, strong acidity, shape selectivity and ion-exchange properties. However, their practical applications can be limited by the small size of the channels and cavities of the microporous structures, and therefore, a great deal of effort has been devoted to enhancing the transport of large-sized molecules in the host pores. Several commercially available zeolites, including faujasite (FAU), mordenite (MOR), beta (BEA), ZSM-5 (MFI) and zeolite L (LTL), have been exposed to a variety of acid and base treatments in the presence of a surfactant (cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide, CTAB), which led to the controlled introduction of intracrystalline mesoporosity. The detailed characterisation of the obtained mesostructured zeolites has been carried out using FTIR spectroscopy, high resolution TEM, XRD, N2 adsorption, 29Si and 27Al MAS NMR. This work demonstrates a successful application of the supramolecular templating approach for generating tuneable mesoporosity in a range of zeolites possessing 12-membered ring channels, which has been applied to zeolite L for the first time, thus producing hierarchical meso-microporous materials with improved accessibility of active sites and enhanced catalytic performance in dealkylation of tri-isopropylbenzene.

8.
Nat Mater ; 16(10): 1010-1015, 2017 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28759033

ABSTRACT

The synthesis of nanostructured zeolites enables modification of catalytically relevant properties such as effective surface area and diffusion path length. Nanostructured zeolites may be synthesized either in alkaline media, and so contain significant numbers of hydrophilic silanol groups, or in expensive and harmful fluoride-containing media. Here, we report and characterize, using a combination of experimental and theoretical techniques, the one-pot synthesis of silanol-free nanosized MFI-type zeolites by introducing atomically dispersed tungsten; this prevents silanol group occurrence by forming flexible W-O-Si bridges. These W-O-Si bonds are more stable than Si-O-Si in the all-silica MFI zeolite. Tungsten incorporation in nanosized MFI crystals also modifies other properties such as structural features, hydrophobicity and Lewis acidity. The effect of these is illustrated on the catalytic epoxidation of styrene and separation of CO2 and NO2. Silanol-free nanosized W-MFI zeolites open new perspectives for catalytic and separation applications.

9.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(21): 17846-17855, 2017 May 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28485914

ABSTRACT

Cold VCl3-plasma is employed for the preparation of highly dispersed vanadium oxide clusters on nanosized zeolite. Different types of zeolites, such as EMT, FAU (z.X), and Beta, are used. The activity of the prepared catalysts is studied in the selective photooxidation of methanol under polychromatic visible and UV irradiations. The physicochemical properties and catalytic performance of plasma-treated zeolite Beta (P-V2O5@Beta) catalyst is compared with zeolite Beta (V2O5@Beta) and amorphous silica (V2O5@SiO2) impregnated vanadium oxide catalysts. Pure V2O5 is used as a reference material. The set of catalytic data shows that plasma-prepared zeolite Beta based catalyst displays the highest activity. Complementary characterization techniques including XRD, N2-sorption, FTIR, ionic exchange, pyridine adsorption, Raman, NMR, TPR, and EDX-TEM are used to study the impact of the preparation approach on the physicochemical properties and catalytic performance of photocatalysts.

10.
Solid State Nucl Magn Reson ; 84: 182-195, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28433479

ABSTRACT

Atomic substitutions are a central feature of the physicochemical properties of an increasing number of solid-state materials. The complexity that this chemical disorder locally generates in otherwise crystalline solids poses a major challenge to the understanding of the relationships between the structure and properties of materials at the atomic and molecular level. Strategies designed to efficiently explore the ensemble of local chemical environments present in disordered crystals and predict their signatures in local spectroscopies such as solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) are therefore essential. Focusing on the Ga/Si disorder in the framework of rubidium-exchanged gallosilicate natrolite zeolite (Rb-PST-1) with a high Ga content (SiGa=1.28), we show how the structure-generation approach implemented in the new program supercell (Okhotnikov et al. [26]) provides an excellent basis for the understanding of complex experimental spectroscopic data. Furthermore, we describe how exhaustive explorations of atomic configurations can be performed to seek local structural ordering and/or disordering factors. In the case of Rb-PST-1, we more specifically explore the possibility to form and to detect the presence of thermodynamically unfavorable Ga-O-Ga connectivities. While particularly adapted to the description of dense materials, we demonstrate that this approach may successfully be used to reproduce and interpret the distributions of local structural distortions (i.e., the geometrical disorder) resulting from the chemical disorder in systems as complex as microporous zeolites.

11.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 18(44): 30585-30594, 2016 Nov 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27785497

ABSTRACT

Nanosized EMT-type zeolite crystals in sodium (Na-EMT) and ion-exchanged lithium (Li-EMT) forms were prepared. The sorption behavior of Li(Na)-EMT samples towards water, methanol and a mixture of both (50 : 50) was studied by combined thermogravimetric and infrared spectroscopic methods. The stability of the samples prior to and after the sorption measurements in two subsequent cycles was confirmed by X-ray diffraction, N2 sorption and NMR spectroscopy. The high sorption capacity of the Li-EMT sample towards water was demonstrated. It was found that the methanol is replaced by water faster in the Li-EMT sample in comparison to the Na-EMT sample. At low temperature, the methanol shows weak adsorption on each cationic site and no side products during desorption for both samples were obtained.

12.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 52(17): 3512-5, 2016 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26839923

ABSTRACT

SAPO-34 crystals are etched in fluoride medium. The interface between crystalline domains is dissolved and yields a hierarchical material with a system of straight intersecting mesopores that improve the access to micropore space.

13.
Nanoscale ; 7(13): 5787-93, 2015 Mar 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25757655

ABSTRACT

Control of the crystallite dimensions of the microporous aluminophosphate AlPO-41 (AFO-type framework structure), and the Si-containing analogue SAPO-41, was attained down to the nanometer scale under stable hydrothermal conditions. The combined application of a tetraalkylammonium co-template (tetrapentylammonium hydroxide) along with an amine structure directing agent (n-dipropylamine) stabilized through the use of ethanol in the initial suspension enables a crystallization medium, which remains homogeneous throughout the entire synthesis. As a direct consequence of the optimized homogeneity of the suspension, the AFO-type microporous nanocrystals (AlPO-41 and SAPO-41) with a size in the range of 30-500 nm with yields surpassing 50% are obtained. The feasibility to obtain nanosized AlPO-41 and SAPO-41 crystals using ethanol as a polarity equalizing agent, resulting in a scalable hydrothermal synthesis from non-colloidal starting mixtures without the use of other assisting methods, is presented.

14.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 15(20): 7604-12, 2013 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23588621

ABSTRACT

Here we present the one-dimensional (29)Si and (27)Al MAS NMR and two-dimensional (27)Al MQMAS and DQF-STMAS NMR spectra of the monovalent (Na(+), K(+), Rb(+), Cs(+) and NH4(+)) and divalent (Ca(2+), Sr(2+) and Ba(2+)) cation forms of the natural zeolite natrolite (framework type NAT) with complete Si-Al ordering over the crystallographically distinct tetrahedral sites and with the same hydration state (hydrated, partially dehydrated or fully dehydrated). In the case of monovalent cation-exchanged natrolites, the differences in their crystal symmetry evidenced by (29)Si MAS NMR were found to be in good agreement with those determined by crystallographic analyses. However, (27)Al DQF-STMAS NMR spectroscopy shows the presence of two distinct Al sites in dehydrated K-NAT, Rb-NAT and NH4-NAT, suggesting that their actual crystal symmetry is lower than the reported one (i.e., orthorhombic Fdd2). The MAS NMR results also show that the space group of hydrated Ca-NAT is lower than that (monoclinic F1d1) of hydrated scolecite, the natural calcium counterpart of natrolite, which is also the case with hydrated Sr-NAT and Ba-NAT. We believe that the unexpected diversity in the crystal symmetry of natrolite caused by exchange of various mono- and divalent ions, as well as by dehydration, may be inherently due to the high framework flexibility of this natural zeolite.


Subject(s)
Ammonium Compounds/chemistry , Metals, Alkali/chemistry , Metals, Alkaline Earth/chemistry , Nanostructures/chemistry , Zeolites/chemistry , Cations/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
15.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 15(2): 642-50, 2013 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23187618

ABSTRACT

IR and NMR spectroscopy were used to determine the silanol content in the most common mesoporous ordered silicas: MCM-41, MCM-48, SBA-15 and SBA-16. In addition, a spray dried MCM-41 and an ethene bridged PMO are investigated. The results are compared with a commercial chromatographic silica (Nucleosil). The complete distribution of surface and bulk silanols, and of isolated, geminal and vicinal silanols for all these materials is presented. A distinction is made between the total silanol number and the reachable or surface silanol content. The latter is determined by controlled reactions with simple silanes. All mesoporous ordered silicas, and especially the thick walled SBA-type materials and the PMO contain a surprisingly high amount of total silanol sites, albeit that up to 90% of these silanols are buried inside the walls and are not reachable for small silanes.

16.
Chemistry ; 16(21): 6224-33, 2010 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20397162

ABSTRACT

The isomerization of o-xylene, a prototypical example of shape-selective catalysis by zeolites, was investigated on hierarchical porous ZSM-5. Extensive intracrystalline mesoporosity in ZSM-5 was introduced by controlled silicon leaching with NaOH. In addition to the development of secondary porosity, the treatment also induced substantial aluminum redistribution, increasing the density of Lewis acid sites located at the external surface of the crystals. However, the strength of the remaining Brønsted sites was not changed. The mesoporous zeolite displayed a higher o-xylene conversion than its parent, owing to the reduced diffusion limitations. However, the selectivity to p-xylene decreased, and fast deactivation due to coking occurred. This is mainly due to the deleterious effect of acidity at the substantially increased external surface and near the pore mouths. A consecutive mild HCl washing of the hierarchical zeolite proved effective to increase the p-xylene selectivity and reduce the deactivation rate. The HCl-washed hierarchical ZSM-5 displayed an approximately twofold increase in p-xylene yield compared to the purely microporous zeolite. The reaction was followed by operando infrared spectroscopy to simultaneously monitor the catalytic performance and the buildup of carbonaceous deposits on the surface. Our results show that the interplay between activity, selectivity, and stability in modified zeolites can be optimized by relatively simple post-synthesis treatments, such as base leaching (introduction of mesoporosity) and acid washing (surface acidity modification).

17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 131(45): 16580-6, 2009 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19848393

ABSTRACT

The use of organic structure directing agents in zeolite syntheses has dramatically extended the number of zeolite structure types during the past decades. However, for about 20% of all known zeolite structure types, the necessary postsynthesis elimination of organic templates by high-temperature combustion leads to structure collapse, where the particularly strongly affected are Ge-rich zeolites. Here, we present a treatment approach that leads to zeolite structure stabilization by postsynthetic isomorphous substitution of Al for Ge. An important advantage of this new method is that no preliminary elimination of the organic structure directing agent from zeolite pores is required; thus it can be applied to microporous materials that cannot withstand the high temperature combustion of organic templates. The experimental data unambiguously show that besides framework stabilization the postsynthesis treatment facilitates incorporation of active sites in the zeolite framework. The feasibility of this new approach is corroborated by alumination of a BEC-type material. The presented method is expected to broaden the practical utilization of many microporous materials by improving their thermal stability.

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