| Literature DB >> 35516373 |
Anand Chokkalingam1, Watcharop Chaikittisilp1, Kenta Iyoki1, Sye Hoe Keoh1, Yutaka Yanaba2, Takeshi Yoshikawa2, Tetsuro Kusamoto3, Tatsuya Okubo1, Toru Wakihara1.
Abstract
Shortening the synthesis time of SSZ-16 (AFX type) zeolite from several days to 2 h has been achieved using an ultrafast synthesis route involving N,N,N',N'-tetraethylbicyclo[2.2.2]oct-7-ene-2,3:5,6-dipyrrolidinium (TEBOP) as an organic structure-directing agent (OSDA) in a tubular reactor assisted by seed crystals. Recently, copper exchanged SSZ-16 has been looked upon as one of the few equivalents to SSZ-13 for the selective catalytic reduction of NOx with ammonia (NH3-SCR) from automobile exhausts. Hydrothermal stability is one of the crucial properties for any zeolites that compete for automobile applications. All the samples prepared were analyzed using sophisticated physio-chemical techniques and those prepared from TEBOP were subjected to SCR of NOx reactions. The rapid crystal growth induced by high synthesis temperature bestowed the ultrafast prepared SSZ-16 with high crystallinity and hydrothermal stability as well as enhanced SCR of NOx activity even when aged at 800 °C. Compared to 1,1'-(1,4-butanediyl)bis-4-aza-1-azoniabicyclo[2.2.2]octane dibromide (DABCO), TEBOP was found to be desirable as an OSDA for high crystallinity and hydrothermal stability. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 35516373 PMCID: PMC9064439 DOI: 10.1039/c9ra02787d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Comparison of physicochemical data of SSZ-16 zeolites before and after copper exchange
| Sample name | ICP molar ratio | BET surface area (m2 g−1) | Micropore volume (cc g−1) | Yield (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Si/Al | Cu/Al | ||||
| AC-DABCO | 3.18 | 0.00 | 621 | 0.23 | 33 |
| AC-TEBOP | 4.63 | 0.00 | 687 | 0.26 | 51 |
| TR-TEBOP | 4.66 | 0.00 | 679 | 0.26 | 82 |
| Cu-AC-DABCO | 3.17 | 0.33 | 627 | 0.23 | |
| Cu-AC-TEBOP | 4.60 | 0.36 | 594 | 0.20 | |
| Cu-TR-TEBOP | 4.77 | 0.33 | 620 | 0.22 | |
Comparison of physicochemical data of the copper ion-exchanged samples before and after hydrothermal aging
| Sample name | BET surface area (m2 g−1) | Micropore volume (cc g−1) | Crystallinity (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cu-AC-DABCO | 627 | 0.23 | 100 |
| Cu-AC-DABCO-700 | 617 | 0.23 | 86 |
| Cu-AC-DABCO-750 | 616 | 0.22 | 75 |
| Cu-AC-DABCO-800 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Cu-AC-TEBOP | 594 | 0.20 | 100 |
| Cu-AC-TEBOP-700 | 656 | 0.24 | 88 |
| Cu-AC-TEBOP-750 | 679 | 0.25 | 86 |
| Cu-AC-TEBOP-800 | 127 | 0.04 | 12 |
| Cu-TR-TEBOP | 620 | 0.22 | 100 |
| Cu-TR-TEBOP-700 | 616 | 0.21 | 89 |
| Cu-TR-TEBOP-750 | 579 | 0.19 | 88 |
| Cu-TR-TEBOP-800 | 477 | 0.16 | 69 |
Fig. 1Comparison of crystallinity curves of the fresh copper-ion exchanged SSZ-16 samples plotted as a function of hydrothermal aging temperature.
Fig. 2SEM images of SSZ-16 samples (a) seed; (b) Cu-AC-DABCO; (c) Cu-AC-TEBOP; (d) Cu-TR-TEBOP.
Fig. 3SEM images of Cu-TR-TEBOP samples (a) Cu-TR-TEBOP; (b) Cu-TR-TEBOP-700; (c) Cu-TR-TEBOP-750; (d) Cu-TR-TEBOP-800.
Fig. 4ESR spectra of SSZ-16 samples (a) fresh and (b) Cu-TR-TEBOP series; 29Si solid MAS NMR of (c) fresh and (d) Cu-TR-TEBOP series and 27Al solid MAS NMR of (e) fresh and (f) Cu-TR-TEBOP series.
Fig. 5NH3 SCR of NOx performance of (a) Cu-AC-TEBOP series; (b) Cu-TR-TEBOP series.