Hydrothermal Aging Enhances Nitrogen Oxide Reduction over Iron-Exchanged Zeolites at 150 °C.
Xuechao TanPablo García-AznarGerman SastreSuk Bong HongPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Ammonia selective catalytic reduction (NH 3 -SCR) over copper- and iron-exchanged zeolites is a state-of-the-art technology for removal of nitrogen oxides (NO x , NO, and NO 2 ) from exhaust emissions but suffers from poor low-temperature (i.e., 150 °C) activity. Here we show that hydrothermal aging of Fe-beta, Fe-ZSM-5, and Fe-ferrierite at 650 °C or higher leads to a remarkable increase in NO x conversion from ∼30 to ∼80% under fast NH 3 -SCR conditions at 150 °C. The practical relevance of this finding becomes more evident as an aged Fe-beta/fresh Cu-SSZ-13 composite catalyst exhibits ∼90% conversion. We propose that a neutral heteronuclear bis-μ-oxo ironaluminum dimer might be created within iron zeolites during hydrothermal aging and catalyze ammonium nitrate reduction by NO at 150 °C. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the activation free energy (125 versus 147 kJ mol -1 ) for the reaction of NO with adsorbed NO 3 - species, the rate-determining step of ammonium nitrate reduction, is considerably lower on the bis-μ-oxo ironaluminum site than on the well-known mononuclear iron-oxo cation site, thus greatly enhancing the overall SCR activity.
Keyphrases
- ionic liquid
- density functional theory
- room temperature
- metal organic framework
- anaerobic digestion
- molecular dynamics
- iron deficiency
- nitric oxide
- aqueous solution
- municipal solid waste
- sewage sludge
- drinking water
- visible light
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- molecular dynamics simulations
- single cell
- highly efficient
- carbon dioxide
- crystal structure