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Tandem catalysis with double-shelled hollow spheres.

Jiadong XiaoKang ChengXiaobin XieMengheng WangShiyou XingYuanshuai LiuThomas HartmanDonglong FuKoen BossersMarijn A van HuisAlfons van BlaaderenYe WangBert M Weckhuysen
Published in: Nature materials (2022)
Metal-zeolite composites with metal (oxide) and acid sites are promising catalysts for integrating multiple reactions in tandem to produce a wide variety of wanted products without separating or purifying the intermediates. However, the conventional design of such materials often leads to uncontrolled and non-ideal spatial distributions of the metal inside/on the zeolites, limiting their catalytic performance. Here we demonstrate a simple strategy for synthesizing double-shelled, contiguous metal oxide@zeolite hollow spheres (denoted as MO@ZEO DSHSs) with controllable structural parameters and chemical compositions. This involves the self-assembly of zeolite nanocrystals onto the surface of metal ion-containing carbon spheres followed by calcination and zeolite growth steps. The step-by-step formation mechanism of the material is revealed using mainly in situ Raman spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction and ex situ electron microscopy. We demonstrate that it is due to this structure that an Fe 2 O 3 @H-ZSM-5 DSHSs-showcase catalyst exhibits superior performance compared with various conventionally structured Fe 2 O 3 -H-ZSM-5 catalysts in gasoline production by the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. This work is expected to advance the rational synthesis and research of hierarchically hollow, core-shell, multifunctional catalyst materials.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • highly efficient
  • electron microscopy
  • raman spectroscopy
  • room temperature
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • ionic liquid
  • molecularly imprinted
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • transition metal
  • dual energy