Pinpointing and Quantifying the Aluminum Distribution in Zeolite Catalysts Using Anomalous Scattering at the Al Absorption Edge.
Ana B PinarPrzemyslaw RzepkaAmy J KnorppLynne B McCuskerChristian BaerlocherThomas HuthwelkerJeroen Anton van BokhovenPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2021)
The location of aluminum in a zeolite framework structure defines the accessibility and geometry of the catalytically active sites, but determining this location crystallographically is fraught with difficulties. Typical zeolite catalysts contain only a small amount of aluminum, and the X-ray scattering factors for silicon and aluminum are very similar. To address this problem, we have exploited the properties of resonant X-ray powder diffraction across the Al K edge, where the aluminum scattering factor changes dramatically. By combining conventional synchrotron powder diffraction data with those collected at energies near the X-ray absorption edge, aluminum is highlighted. In this way, the different distributions of aluminum in two FER-type zeolites with identical chemical compositions but different catalytic properties could be determined unambiguously. The results are consistent with previous studies, but quantitative. This approach constitutes a major advance in our fundamental understanding of the relationship between zeolite structure and catalytic activity.