Highly active olefin metathesis catalysts were prepared by thermal spreading MoO3 and/or MoO2(acac)2 on MWW zeolites (MCM-22, delaminated MCM-56) and on two-dimensional MFI (all in NH4 + form). The catalysts' activities were tested in the metathesis of neat 1-octene (as an example of a longer chain olefin) at 40 °C. Catalysts with 6 wt % or 5 wt % of Mo were used. The acidic character of the supports had an important effect on both the catalyst activity and selectivity. The catalyst activity increases in the order 6MoO3/HZSM-5(25) (Si/Al = 25) << 6MoO2(acac)2/MCM-22(70) < 6MoO3/2D-MFI(26) < 6MoO3/MCM-56(13) < 6MoO3/MCM-22(28) reflecting both the enhancing effect of the supports' acidity and accessibility of the catalytic species on the surface. On the other hand the supports' acidity decreases the selectivity to the main metathesis product C14 due to an acid-catalyzed double bond isomerization (followed by cross metathesis) and oligomerization. 6MoO3/2D-MFI(26) with a lower concentration of the acidic centres resulting in catalysts of moderate activity but with the highest selectivity.
- Keywords
- 1-octene, metathesis, molybdenum oxide, thermal spreading, zeolites,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
2D oxide nanomaterials constitute a broad range of materials, with a wide array of current and potential applications, particularly in the fields of energy storage and catalysis for sustainable energy production. Despite the many similarities in structure, composition, and synthetic methods and uses, the current literature on layered oxides is diverse and disconnected. A number of reviews can be found in the literature, but they are mostly focused on one of the particular subclasses of 2D oxides. This review attempts to bridge the knowledge gap between individual layered oxide types by summarizing recent developments in all important 2D oxide systems including supported ultrathin oxide films, layered clays and double hydroxides, layered perovskites, and novel 2D-zeolite-based materials. Particular attention is paid to the underlying similarities and differences between the various materials, and the subsequent challenges faced by each research community. The potential of layered oxides toward future applications is critically evaluated, especially in the areas of electrocatalysis and photocatalysis, biomass conversion, and fine chemical synthesis. Attention is also paid to corresponding novel 3D materials that can be obtained via sophisticated engineering of 2D oxides.
- Keywords
- 2D catalysts, 2D zeolites, energy transitions, environmentally friendly catalysis, layered oxides,
- MeSH
- Catalysis MeSH
- Nanostructures chemistry MeSH
- Oxides chemistry MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Review MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Oxides MeSH
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.
- Keywords
- bifer, chemical exfoliation, ilerite, nanocomposites, ultrathin zeolite nanosheets, zeolite films, zeolites MFI and MWW,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Review MeSH
Hydrolysis of germanosilicate zeolites with the IWW structure shows two different outcomes depending on the composition of the starting materials. Ge-rich IWW (Si/Ge=3.1) is disassembled into a layered material (IPC-5P), which can be reassembled into an almost pure silica IWW on treatment with diethoxydimethylsilane. Ge-poor IWW (Si/Ge=6.4) is not completely disassembled on hydrolysis, but retains some 3D connectivity. This structure can be reassembled into IWW by incorporation of Al to fill the defects left when the Ge is removed.
- Keywords
- ADOR, IWW, germanosilicate, solid-state transformation, zeolites,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
2D layered materials, including metal-di-chalcogenides and transition metal layered double hydroxides, among others, are intensively studied because of new properties that emerge from their 2D confinement, which are attractive for advanced applications. Herein, 2D cobalt ion (Co2+) and benzimidazole (bIm) based zeolite-imidazole framework nanosheets, ZIF-9(III), are reported as exceptionally efficient electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Specifically, liquid-phase ultrasonication is applied to exfoliate a [Co4(bIm)16] zeolite-imidazole framework (ZIF), named as ZIF-9(III) phase, into nanoscale sheets. ZIF-9(III) is selectively prepared through simple mechanical grinding of cobalt nitrate and benzimidazole in the presence of a small amount of ethanol. The resultant exfoliated nanosheets exhibit significantly higher OER activity in alkaline conditions than the corresponding bulk phases ZIF-9 and ZIF-9(III). The electrochemical and physicochemical characterization data support the assignment of the OER activity of the exfoliated nanosheet derived material to nitrogen coordinated cobalt oxyhydroxide N4CoOOH sites, following a mechanism known for Co-porphyrin and related systems. Thus, exfoliated 2D nanosheets hold promise as potential alternatives to commercial noble metal electrocatalysts for the OER.
- Keywords
- 2D materials, electrocatalysis, liquid‐phase exfoliation, mechanochemical synthesis, oxygen evolution, zeolite imidazole frameworks (ZIFs),
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
Research activities and recent developments in the area of three-dimensional zeolites and their two-dimensional analogues are reviewed. Zeolites are the most important industrial heterogeneous catalysts with numerous applications. However, they suffer from limited pore sizes not allowing penetration of sterically demanding molecules to their channel systems and to active sites. We briefly highlight here the synthesis, properties and catalytic potential of three-dimensional zeolites followed by a discussion of hierarchical zeolites combining micro- and mesoporosity. The final part is devoted to two-dimensional analogues developed recently. Novel bottom-up and top-down synthetic approaches for two-dimensional zeolites, their properties, and catalytic performances are thoroughly discussed in this review.
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Review MeSH
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.
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
Physical adsorption of methane in purely siliceous molecular sieves prepared by a recently discovered synthetic pathway using 2D zeolites as nanoscale building blocks has been investigated by means of combined experimental and theoretical approaches. The DFT/CC-based method has been tested on ADOR zeolites of the UTL family and a few experimentally well-characterized siliceous zeolites. Excellent agreement between theoretical and experimental heats of adsorption has been found for OKO, PCR, MFI, CHA and AEI zeolites. The observed discrepancy for the UTL germanosilicate (2 kJ mol-1) has been plausibly explained using a simple model of D4R defects. The proposed methodology can be used as a reliable characterization tool for newly synthesized silica nanomaterials.
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
The adsorption and catalytic properties of three-dimensional zeolite UTL were investigated computationally along with properties of its two-dimensional analogue IPC-1P that can be obtained from UTL by a removal of D4R units. Adsorption properties and Lewis acidity of extra-framework Li(+) sites were investigated for both two- and three-dimensional forms of UTL using the carbon monoxide as a probe molecule. The CO adsorption enthalpies, calculated with various dispersion-corrected DFT methods, including DFT/CC, DFT-D2, and vdW-DF2, and the CO stretching frequencies obtained with the νCO/rCO correlation method are compared for corresponding Li(+) sites in 3D and 2D UTL zeolite. For the majority of framework Al positions the Li(+) cation is preferably located in one of the channel wall sites and such sites remains unchanged upon the 3D → 2D UTL transformation; consequently, the adsorption enthalpies become only slightly smaller in 2D UTL (less than 3 kJ mol(-1)) due to the missing part of dispersion interactions and νCO becomes also only up to 5 cm(-1) smaller in 2D UTL due to the missing repulsion with framework oxygen atoms from the opposite site of the zeolite channel (effect from the top). However, when Li(+) is located in the intersection site in 3D UTL (about 20% probability), its coordination with the framework is significantly increased in 2D UTL and that is accompanied by significant decrease of both νCO (about 20 cm(-1)) and adsorption enthalpy (about 20 kJ mol(-1)). Because the intersection sites in 3D UTL are the most active adsorption and catalytic Lewis sites, the results reported herein suggest that the 3D → 2D transformation of UTL zeolite is connected with partial decrease of zeolite activity in processes driven by Lewis acid sites.
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
The catalytic activity and the adsorption properties of zeolites depend on their topology and composition. For a better understanding of the structure-activity relationship it is advantageous to focus just on one of these parameters. Zeolites synthesized recently by the ADOR protocol offer a new possibility to investigate the effect of the channel diameter on the adsorption and catalytic properties of zeolites: UTL, OKO, and PCR zeolites consist of the same dense 2D layers (IPC-1P) that are connected with different linkers (D4R, S4R, O-atom, respectively) resulting in the channel systems of different sizes (14R × 12R, 12R × 10R, 10R × 8R, respectively). Consequently, extra-framework cation sites compensating charge of framework Al located in these dense 2D layers (channel-wall sites) are the same in all three zeolites. Therefore, the effect of the zeolite channel size on the Lewis properties of the cationic sites can be investigated independent of other factors determining the quality of Lewis sites. UTL, OKO, and PCR and pillared 2D IPC-1PI materials were prepared in Li-form and their properties were studied by a combination of experimental and theoretical methods. Qualitatively different conclusions are drawn for Li(+) located at the channel-wall sites and at the intersection sites (Li(+) located at the intersection of two zeolite channels): the Lewis acid strength of Li(+) at intersection sites is larger than that at channel-wall sites. The Lewis acid strength of Li(+) at channel-wall sites increases with decreasing channel size. When intersecting channels are small (10R × 8R in PCR) the intersection Li(+) sites are no longer stable and Li(+) is preferentially located at the channel-wall sites. Last but not least, the increase in adsorption heats with the decreasing channel size (due to enlarged dispersion contribution) is clearly demonstrated.
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH