Download PDF Download PDF

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Publication date: 2021-10-06
Volume: 143 Pages: 16243 - 16255
Publisher: American Chemical Society

Author:

Bols, Max L
Devos, Julien ; Rhoda, Hannah M ; Plessers, Dieter ; Solomon, Edward ; Schoonheydt, Robert A ; Sels, Bert F ; Dusselier, Michiel

Keywords:

ACTIVE-SITES, ALPHA-OXYGEN, CATALYTIC PERFORMANCE, Chemistry, Chemistry, Multidisciplinary, EXTRA-FRAMEWORK POSITIONS, FE/ZSM-5 CATALYSTS, METHANE HYDROXYLATION, N2O DECOMPOSITION, NITROUS-OXIDE, Physical Sciences, Science & Technology, SURFACE OXYGEN, ZSM-5 ZEOLITE, 1276021N#55741515, G0A0321N#56128895, 03 Chemical Sciences, General Chemistry, 34 Chemical sciences, 40 Engineering

Abstract:

α-Fe(II) active sites in iron zeolites catalyze N2O decomposition and form highly reactive α-O that selectively oxidizes unreactive hydrocarbons, such as methane. How these α-Fe(II) sites are formed remains unclear. Here different methods of iron introduction into zeolites are compared to derive the limiting factors of Fe speciation to α-Fe(II). Postsynthetic iron introduction procedures on small pore zeolites suffer from limited iron diffusion and dispersion leading to iron oxides. In contrast, by introducing Fe(III) in the hydrothermal synthesis mixture of the zeolite (one-pot synthesis) and the right treatment, crystalline CHA can be prepared with >1.6 wt % Fe, of which >70% is α-Fe(II). The effect of iron on the crystallization is investigated, and the intermediate Fe species are tracked using UV-vis-NIR, FT-IR, and Mössbauer spectroscopy. These data are supplemented with online mass spectrometry in each step, with reactivity tests in α-O formation and with methanol yields in stoichiometric methane activation at room temperature and pressure. We recover up to 134 μmol methanol per gram in a single cycle through H2O/CH3CN extraction and 183 μmol/g through steam desorption, a record yield for iron zeolites. A general scheme is proposed for iron speciation in zeolites through the steps of drying, calcination, and activation. The formation of two cohorts of α-Fe(II) is discovered, one before and one after high temperature activation. We propose the latter cohort depends on the reshuffling of aluminum in the zeolite lattice to accommodate thermodynamically favored α-Fe(II).