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Dynamic Copper Site Redispersion through Atom Trapping in Zeolite Defects.

Stephen C PurdyGregory CollingeJunyan ZhangShivangi N BorateKinga A UnocicQiyuan WuEvan C WegenerArthur Jeremy KropfNohor River SamadSimuck F YukDifan ZhangSusan E HabasTheodore R KrauseJames W HarrisMal-Soon LeeVassiliki-Alexandra GlezakouRoger RousseauAndrew D SuttonZhenglong Li
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Single-site copper-based catalysts have shown remarkable activity and selectivity for a variety of reactions. However, deactivation by sintering in high-temperature reducing environments remains a challenge and often limits their use due to irreversible structural changes to the catalyst. Here, we report zeolite-based copper catalysts in which copper oxide agglomerates formed after reaction can be repeatedly redispersed back to single sites using an oxidative treatment in air at 550 °C. Under different environments, single-site copper in Cu-Zn-Y/deAlBeta undergoes dynamic changes in structure and oxidation state that can be tuned to promote the formation of key active sites while minimizing deactivation through Cu sintering. For example, single-site Cu 2+ reduces to Cu 1+ after catalyst pretreatment (270 °C, 101 kPa H 2 ) and further to Cu 0 nanoparticles under reaction conditions (270-350 °C, 7 kPa EtOH, 94 kPa H 2 ) or accelerated aging (400-450 °C, 101 kPa H 2 ). After regeneration at 550 °C in air, agglomerated CuO was dispersed back to single sites in the presence and absence of Zn and Y, which was verified by imaging, in situ spectroscopy, and catalytic rate measurements. Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations show that solvation of CuO monomers by water facilitates their transport through the zeolite pore, and condensation of the CuO monomer with a fully protonated silanol nest entraps copper and reforms the single-site structure. The capability of silanol nests to trap and stabilize copper single sites under oxidizing conditions could extend the use of single-site copper catalysts to a wider variety of reactions and allows for a simple regeneration strategy for copper single-site catalysts.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • stem cells
  • metal organic framework
  • high resolution
  • heavy metals
  • gold nanoparticles