Confined
Ionic Environments Tailoring the Reactivity
of Molecules in the Micropores of BEA-Type Zeolite
Posted on 2024-06-18 - 15:10
In the presence of
water, hydronium ions formed within the micropores
of zeolite H-BEA significantly influence the surrounding environment
and the reactivity of organic substrates. The positive charge of these
ions, coupled with the zeolite’s negatively charged framework,
results in an ionic environment that causes a strongly nonideal solvation
behavior of cyclohexanol. This leads to a significantly higher excess
chemical potential in the initial state and stabilizes at the same
time the charged transition state in the dehydration of cyclohexanol.
As a result, the free-energy barrier of the reaction is lowered, leading
to a marked increase in the reaction rates. Nonetheless, there is
a limit to the reaction rate enhancement by the hydronium ion concentration.
Experiments conducted with low concentrations of reactants show that
beyond an optimal concentration, the required spatial rearrangement
between hydronium ions and cyclohexanols inhibits further increases
in the reaction rate, leading to a peak in the intrinsic activity
of hydronium ions. The quantification of excess chemical potential
in both initial and transition states for zeolites H-BEA, along with
findings from HMFI, provides a basis to generalize and predict rates
for hydronium-ion-catalyzed dehydration reactions in Brønsted
zeolites.
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Kim, Sungmin; Chen, Feng; Camaioni, Donald M.; Derewinski, Miroslaw A.; Gutiérrez, Oliver Y.; Liu, Yue; et al. (1753). Confined
Ionic Environments Tailoring the Reactivity
of Molecules in the Micropores of BEA-Type Zeolite. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c03405