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Get Free AccessBy combining kinetics and theoretical calculations, we show here the benefits of going beyond the concept of static localized and defined active sites on solid catalysts, into a system that globally and dynamically considers the active site located in an environment that involves a scaffold structure particularly suited for a target reaction. We demonstrate that such a system is able to direct the reaction through a preferred mechanism when two of them are competing. This is illustrated here for an industrially relevant reaction, the diethylbenzene–benzene transalkylation. The zeolite catalyst (ITQ-27) optimizes location, density, and environment of acid sites to drive the reaction through the preselected and preferred diaryl-mediated mechanism, instead of the alkyl transfer pathway. This is achieved by minimizing the activation energy of the selected pathway through weak interactions, much in the way that it occurs in enzymatic catalysts. We show that ITQ-27 outperforms previously reported zeolites for the DEB-Bz transalkylation and, more specifically, industrially relevant zeolites such as faujasite, beta, and mordenite.
Chengeng Li, Pau Ferri, Cecilia Paris, Manuel Moliner, Mercedes Boronat, Avelino Avelino (2021). Design and Synthesis of the Active Site Environment in Zeolite Catalysts for Selectively Manipulating Mechanistic Pathways. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 143(28), pp. 10718-10726, DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c04818.
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Type
Article
Year
2021
Authors
6
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Journal of the American Chemical Society
DOI
10.1021/jacs.1c04818
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