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Modulation of aluminum species in mordenite zeolite for enhanced dimethyl ether carbonylation

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Modulation of aluminum species in mordenite zeolite for enhanced dimethyl ether carbonylation. / Liu, Yunduo; Li, Ying; Qi, Ji et al.
In: Catalysis Today, Vol. 437, 114776, 01.07.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Liu, Y, Li, Y, Qi, J, Liu, H, Wang, X, Wang, S, Zhu, K, Huang, S & Ma, X 2024, 'Modulation of aluminum species in mordenite zeolite for enhanced dimethyl ether carbonylation', Catalysis Today, vol. 437, 114776. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cattod.2024.114776

APA

Liu, Y., Li, Y., Qi, J., Liu, H., Wang, X., Wang, S., Zhu, K., Huang, S., & Ma, X. (2024). Modulation of aluminum species in mordenite zeolite for enhanced dimethyl ether carbonylation. Catalysis Today, 437, Article 114776. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cattod.2024.114776

Vancouver

Liu Y, Li Y, Qi J, Liu H, Wang X, Wang S et al. Modulation of aluminum species in mordenite zeolite for enhanced dimethyl ether carbonylation. Catalysis Today. 2024 Jul 1;437:114776. Epub 2024 May 3. doi: 10.1016/j.cattod.2024.114776

Author

Liu, Yunduo ; Li, Ying ; Qi, Ji et al. / Modulation of aluminum species in mordenite zeolite for enhanced dimethyl ether carbonylation. In: Catalysis Today. 2024 ; Vol. 437.

Bibtex

@article{2de4deaa046a460e86965b96169c6e76,
title = "Modulation of aluminum species in mordenite zeolite for enhanced dimethyl ether carbonylation",
abstract = "Dimethyl ether (DME) carbonylation is an important intermediate step in the synthesis of methyl acetate (MA) and ethanol. H-form mordenite (MOR) can efficiently catalyze the reaction, in which Br{\o}nsted acid sites (BASs) associated with framework Al function as active sites. But the role of other Al species such as exteraframework Al (EFAl) and framework-associated Al still remains unknown. In this study, we have proposed two convenient approaches for controlling the two Al species and investigating their influence on the DME carbonylation reaction. NH3-TPD and Py-IR analyses revealed that the number of BASs increased after the removal of EFAl and the inhibition the formation of framework-associated Al. The reactivity results showed that the elimination of EFAl promoted the DME conversion from 28% to 46%. Additionally, through the implementation of in-situ calcination to impede the presence of framework-associated Al, the DME conversion increased from 28% to 50%. With the understanding that both EFAl and framework-associated Al have a detrimental effect on the reaction, the highest conversion is achieved with these two treatments, leading to 73% DME conversion with 99% selectivity to MA. Our findings provide a systematical strategy to effectively regulate the presence of Al species in zeolite, offering insights of rational design to optimize zeolite catalysts for important industrialized process.",
author = "Yunduo Liu and Ying Li and Ji Qi and Hu Liu and Xiaodong Wang and Shiwei Wang and Kongying Zhu and Shouying Huang and Xinbin Ma",
year = "2024",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.cattod.2024.114776",
language = "English",
volume = "437",
journal = "Catalysis Today",
issn = "0920-5861",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Modulation of aluminum species in mordenite zeolite for enhanced dimethyl ether carbonylation

AU - Liu, Yunduo

AU - Li, Ying

AU - Qi, Ji

AU - Liu, Hu

AU - Wang, Xiaodong

AU - Wang, Shiwei

AU - Zhu, Kongying

AU - Huang, Shouying

AU - Ma, Xinbin

PY - 2024/7/1

Y1 - 2024/7/1

N2 - Dimethyl ether (DME) carbonylation is an important intermediate step in the synthesis of methyl acetate (MA) and ethanol. H-form mordenite (MOR) can efficiently catalyze the reaction, in which Brønsted acid sites (BASs) associated with framework Al function as active sites. But the role of other Al species such as exteraframework Al (EFAl) and framework-associated Al still remains unknown. In this study, we have proposed two convenient approaches for controlling the two Al species and investigating their influence on the DME carbonylation reaction. NH3-TPD and Py-IR analyses revealed that the number of BASs increased after the removal of EFAl and the inhibition the formation of framework-associated Al. The reactivity results showed that the elimination of EFAl promoted the DME conversion from 28% to 46%. Additionally, through the implementation of in-situ calcination to impede the presence of framework-associated Al, the DME conversion increased from 28% to 50%. With the understanding that both EFAl and framework-associated Al have a detrimental effect on the reaction, the highest conversion is achieved with these two treatments, leading to 73% DME conversion with 99% selectivity to MA. Our findings provide a systematical strategy to effectively regulate the presence of Al species in zeolite, offering insights of rational design to optimize zeolite catalysts for important industrialized process.

AB - Dimethyl ether (DME) carbonylation is an important intermediate step in the synthesis of methyl acetate (MA) and ethanol. H-form mordenite (MOR) can efficiently catalyze the reaction, in which Brønsted acid sites (BASs) associated with framework Al function as active sites. But the role of other Al species such as exteraframework Al (EFAl) and framework-associated Al still remains unknown. In this study, we have proposed two convenient approaches for controlling the two Al species and investigating their influence on the DME carbonylation reaction. NH3-TPD and Py-IR analyses revealed that the number of BASs increased after the removal of EFAl and the inhibition the formation of framework-associated Al. The reactivity results showed that the elimination of EFAl promoted the DME conversion from 28% to 46%. Additionally, through the implementation of in-situ calcination to impede the presence of framework-associated Al, the DME conversion increased from 28% to 50%. With the understanding that both EFAl and framework-associated Al have a detrimental effect on the reaction, the highest conversion is achieved with these two treatments, leading to 73% DME conversion with 99% selectivity to MA. Our findings provide a systematical strategy to effectively regulate the presence of Al species in zeolite, offering insights of rational design to optimize zeolite catalysts for important industrialized process.

U2 - 10.1016/j.cattod.2024.114776

DO - 10.1016/j.cattod.2024.114776

M3 - Journal article

VL - 437

JO - Catalysis Today

JF - Catalysis Today

SN - 0920-5861

M1 - 114776

ER -