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Mechanistic proposal for the conversion of syngas to light alkanes in Zn-ZSM-5 zeolite linking theoretical calculations to experimental characterizations.
- Source :
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Microporous & Mesoporous Materials . Jan2024, Vol. 364, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p. - Publication Year :
- 2024
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Abstract
- The direct syngas conversion to olefins, aromatics and other hydrocarbons has attracted increasing attention while unraveling the complex reaction mechanism is of great challenge. It was recently demonstrated that zinc-exchanged zeolites could selectively convert syngas to alkanes, particular ethane, and [Zn–O–Zn] motif is likely the intrinsic active site. The underlying reaction network however remains ambiguous. Herein, we proposed a reaction mechanism for the direct conversion of syngas to light alkanes including methane and ethane using density functional theory calculations in periodic [Zn–O–Zn]-ZSM-5 zeolite model. The evolution of syngas to ethane follows the sequence of CO → CH 2 O → CH 2 CO → CH 3 CHO → C 2 H 6. The activation of CO to formaldehyde initiates the reaction. The [Zn–O–Zn] site can readily be reduced by CO to [Zn–Zn] site, which either inserts aldehydes to form [Zn–O-C n H 2n -Zn] motif for chain propagation to higher aldehydes, or converts aldehydes to alkanes for chain termination. Ketene is the first intermediate after the C–C bond coupling between [Zn–O–CH 2 –Zn] and CO. Both the structures and the evolution sequence of the involved intermediates in the proposal (formyl, methylene, acetyl, ethyl) coincide quite well with experimentally quasi in-situ characterized results. The proposed reaction network consisting of initiation, propagation and termination sub-cycles unifies the formation pathway of methane, ethane, and higher alkanes, and bears some resemblance to the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis for syngas conversion. This theoretical work thus further vindicates the critical role of [Zn–O–Zn] site and may proffer some implications to tailor alkane selectivity in metal-exchanged zeolites for syngas conversion. [Display omitted] • Reaction network of syngas to alkanes in Lewis [Zn–O–Zn]-ZSM-5 were established. • Ethane formation follows the sequence of CO.→ CH 2 O → CH 2 CO → CH 3 CHO → C 2 H 6. • Reaction consists of chain initiation, propagation, and termination sub-cycles. • Ketenes were involved in chain propagation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 13871811
- Volume :
- 364
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Microporous & Mesoporous Materials
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 173631196
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.micromeso.2023.112856