Abstract
The acid sites of phosphorus-containing zeosils were probed through a combination of solid acid characterization, density functional theory calculations, and kinetic interrogations, establishing their weakly Brønsted-acidic character. Because of the disparity in the acid-site strength, P-zeosils catalyzed the probe chemistry of isopropanol dehydration slower than aluminosilicate zeolites by an order of magnitude on an active-site basis. Propene selectivity during isopropanol dehydration remained 20-30% higher than that of aluminosilicates, illustrating the distinct nature of the weakly acidic phosphorus active sites that favored unimolecular dehydration routes. Regardless of the confining siliceous environment, the nature of phosphorus active sites was unchanged, as indicated by the identical apparent uni- and bimolecular dehydration energy barriers. Kinetic isotope experiments with deuterated isopropanol feeds implicated an E2-type elimination in propene formation on phosphorus-containing materials. The comparison of kinetic isotope effects between phosphorus-containing zeosils and aluminosilicates pointed to an unchanged isopropanol dehydration mechanism, with changes in the apparent energetic barriers attributed to weaker binding on phosphorus-active sites that lead to a relatively destabilized alcohol dimer adsorbate. Both ex situ alkylamine Hofmann elimination and in situ pyridine titration characterization methods exhibited a phosphorous acid site count that was dependent on the probe molecules' identity or concentration, underpinning the limitations of extending common characterization techniques for Brønsted acid catalysis to weakly acidic materials.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 9933-9948 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | ACS Catalysis |
Volume | 11 |
Issue number | 15 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Aug 6 2021 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2021 American Chemical Society.
Keywords
- Brønsted acidity
- Hofmann elimination
- dehydration
- di-isopropyl ether
- isopropanol
- phosphorus zeosils
- propene