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Journal Of The American Chemical Society

Publication date: 2018-09-26
Volume: 140 Pages: 12021 - 12032
Publisher: American Chemical Society

Author:

Bols, Max L
Hallaert, Simon D ; Snyder, Benjamin ER ; Devos, Julien ; Plessers, Dieter ; Rhoda, Hannah M ; Dusselier, Michiel ; Schoonheydt, Robert A ; Pierloot, Kristine ; Solomon, Edward ; Sels, Bert F

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Physical Sciences, Chemistry, Multidisciplinary, Chemistry, ELECTRONIC-STRUCTURE CALCULATIONS, ZETA-VALENCE QUALITY, GAUSSIAN-BASIS SETS, PERTURBATION-THEORY, CHABAZITE ZEOLITES, EXCHANGED ZEOLITE, TRANSITION-METAL, HIGH-SILICA, DENSITY, ATOMS, 03 Chemical Sciences, General Chemistry, 34 Chemical sciences, 40 Engineering

Abstract:

The formation of single-site α-Fe in the CHA zeolite topology is demonstrated. The site is shown to be active in oxygen atom abstraction from N2O to form a highly reactive α-O, capable of methane activation at room temperature to form methanol. The methanol product can subsequently be desorbed by online steaming at 200 °C. For the intermediate steps of the reaction cycle, the evolution of the Fe active site is monitored by UV-vis-NIR and Mössbauer spectroscopy. A B3LYP-DFT model of the α-Fe site in CHA is constructed, and the ligand field transitions are calculated by CASPT2. The model is experimentally substantiated by the preferential formation of α-Fe over other Fe species, the requirement of paired framework aluminum and a MeOH/Fe ratio indicating a mononuclear active site. The simple CHA topology is shown to mitigate the heterogeneity of iron speciation found on other Fe-zeolites, with Fe2O3 being the only identifiable phase other than α-Fe formed in Fe-CHA. The α-Fe site is formed in the d6r composite building unit, which occurs frequently across synthetic and natural zeolites. Finally, through a comparison between α-Fe in Fe-CHA and Fe-*BEA, the topology's 6MR geometry is found to influence the structure, the ligand field, and consequently the spectroscopy of the α-Fe site in a predictable manner. Variations in zeolite topology can thus be used to rationally tune the active site properties.