HPM-14: A New Germanosilicate Zeolite with Interconnected Extra-Large Pores Plus Odd-Membered and Small Pores*.
Zihao Rei GaoJian LiCong LinÁlvaro MayoralJunliang SunMiguel A CamblorPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
HPM-14 is a new extra-large pore zeolite synthesized using imidazolium-based organic structure-directing agents (SDAs), fluoride anions, and germanium and silicon as tetrahedral components of the framework. Owing to the presence of stacking disorder, the structure elucidation of HPM-14 was challenging, and different techniques were necessary to clarify the details of the structure and to understand the nature of the disorder. The structure has been solved by three-dimensional electron-diffraction technique (3D ED) and consists of an intergrowth of two polymorphs possessing a three-dimensional channel system, including an extra-large pore opened through windows made up of sixteen tetrahedral atoms (16-membered ring, 16MR) as well as two additional sets of odd-membered (9MR) and small (8MR) pores. The intergrowth has been studied by scanning transmission electron microscopy (Cs -STEM) and powder X-ray diffraction simulations (DIFFaX), which show a large predominance of the monoclinic polymorph A.