Influence of Acid Strength on Olefin Selectivity of Chabazite (CHA) Framework Zeolite/Zeotypes during Tandem CO2 Hydrogenation

17 January 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The role of the Brønsted acid sites (BAS) strength of chabazite (CHA) framework on olefin selectivity during methanol-to-olefin (MTO) and tandem CO2 hydrogenation was investigated over an aluminosilicate, SSZ-13 and a silicoaluminophospate, SAPO-34 and their bifunctional admixtures with In2O3. During MTO, SSZ-13 and SAPO-34 yielded primarily olefins (cumulative selectivity of ~60% and ~90%, respectively at cumulative turn-over number, TON over 500). Interestingly, an interpellet admixture of In2O3/SSZ-13 (distance between redox sites and BAS of 260-900 µm)) predominantly yielded paraffins (cumulative selectivity of ~93% at cumulative TON over 40) via the secondary hydrogenation of olefins as seen from the cumulative paraffin-to-olefin (P/O) ratio of ~21 during CO2 hydrogenation. In comparison, an interpellet In2O3/SAPO-34 admixture yielded majority olefins (cumulative selectivity of ~67% at cumulative TON over 60) due to a lesser degree of secondary hydrogenation (cumulative P/O ratio of ~0.2) on the BAS in SAPO-34, which has a lower acid strength as compared to SSZ-13. Interestingly, both interpellet admixtures of In2O3/SSZ-13 and In2O3/SAPO-34 remained stable during tandem CO2 hydrogenation by favoring the olefin cycle and suppressing the formation of deactivation-inducing-aromatics, unlike MTO, where both admixtures showed fast deactivation. Ion-exchange of BAS (H+) with Inδ+ (from In2O3) in intrapellet admixtures (distance between redox sites and BAS of 270-1500 nm) of In2O3/SSZ-13, and In2O3/SAPO-34, inhibited C-C coupling and predominantly formed CH4. Overall, our study related to the product selectivity and deactivation in MTO and tandem CO2 hydrogenation over CHA framework zeolite/zeotype to the aromatic and olefin pool in the hydrocarbon pool mechanism. These underpinnings will help with rational catalyst design for tandem CO2 hydrogenation.

Keywords

C-C coupling
zeolite
ion exchange
MTO
hydrocarbon
methanol
tandem
hydrogenation

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