Number of the records: 1
A procedure for identifying possible products in the assembly-disassembly-organization-reassembly (ADOR) synthesis of zeolites
- 1.0517116 - ÚFCH JH 2020 RIV GB eng J - Journal Article
Henkelis, S. E. - Mazur, M. - Rice, C. M. - Bignami, G. P. M. - Wheatley, P. S. - Ashbrook, S. E. - Čejka, Jiří - Morris, R. E.
A procedure for identifying possible products in the assembly-disassembly-organization-reassembly (ADOR) synthesis of zeolites.
Nature Protocols. Roč. 14, č. 3 (2019), s. 781-794. ISSN 1754-2189. E-ISSN 1750-2799
R&D Projects: GA ČR GBP106/12/G015
Institutional support: RVO:61388955
Keywords : solid-state nmr * channels * zeolites
OECD category: Physical chemistry
Impact factor: 10.419, year: 2019
Method of publishing: Limited access
High-silica zeolites, some of the most important and widely used catalysts in industry, have potential for application across a wide range of traditional and emerging technologies. The many structural topologies of zeolites have a variety of potential uses, so a strong drive to create new zeolites exists. Here, we present a protocol, the assembly-disassembly-organization-reassembly (ADOR) process, for a relatively new method of preparing these important solids. It allows the synthesis of new high-silica zeolites (Si/Al >1,000), whose synthesis is considered infeasible with traditional (solvothermal) methods, offering new topologies that may find novel applications. We show how to identify the optimal conditions (e.g., duration of reaction, temperature, acidity) for ADOR, which is a complex process with different possible outcomes. Following the protocol will allow researchers to identify the different products that are possible from a reaction without recourse to repetitive and time-consuming trial and error. In developing the protocol, germanium-containing UTL zeolites were subjected to hydrolysis conditions using both water and hydrochloric acid as media, which provides an understanding of the effects of temperature and pH on the disassembly (D) and organization (O) steps of the process that define the potential products. Samples were taken from the ongoing reaction periodically over a minimum of 8 h, and each sample was analyzed using powder X-ray diffraction to yield a time course for the reaction at each set of conditions, selected samples were analyzed using transmission electron microscopy and solid-state NMR spectroscopy.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0302404
File Download Size Commentary Version Access 0517116preprint.pdf 0 724.9 KB Author´s preprint open-access 0517116.pdf 0 1.1 MB Publisher’s postprint require
Number of the records: 1