| Literature DB >> 26177928 |
Chao Wang1, Xianfeng Yi1, Jun Xu2, Guodong Qi1, Pan Gao1, Weiyu Wang1, Yueying Chu1, Qiang Wang1, Ningdong Feng1, Xiaolong Liu1, Anmin Zheng1, Feng Deng3.
Abstract
The methanol to olefins conversion over zeolite catalysts is a commercialized process to produce light olefins like ethene and propene but its mechanism is not well understood. We herein investigated the formation of ethene in the methanol to olefins reaction over the H-ZSM-5 zeolite. Three types of ethylcyclopentenyl carbocations, that is, the 1-methyl-3-ethylcyclopentenyl, the 1,4-dimethyl-3-ethylcyclopentenyl, and the 1,5-dimethyl-3-ethylcyclopentenyl cation were unambiguously identified under working conditions by both solid-state and liquid-state NMR spectroscopy as well as GC-MS analysis. These carbocations were found to be well correlated to ethene and lower methylbenzenes (xylene and trimethylbenzene). An aromatics-based paring route provides rationale for the transformation of lower methylbenzenes to ethene through ethylcyclopentenyl cations as the key hydrocarbon-pool intermediates.Entities:
Keywords: carbocations; olefins; reaction mechanisms; solid-state NMR spectroscopy; zeolites
Year: 2015 PMID: 26177928 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201501355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236