Back to Search Start Over

Influence of 1-Butene Adsorption on the Dimerization Activity of Single Metal Cations on UiO-66 Nodes

Authors :
Laura Löbbert
Saumil Chheda
Jian Zheng
Navneet Khetrapal
Julian Schmid
Ruixue Zhao
Carlo A. Gaggioli
Donald M. Camaioni
Ricardo Bermejo-Deval
Oliver Y. Gutiérrez
Yue Liu
J. Ilja Siepmann
Matthew Neurock
Laura Gagliardi
Johannes A. Lercher
Source :
Journal of the American Chemical Society. 145:1407-1422
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2023.

Abstract

Grafting metal cations to missing linker defect sites in zirconium-based metal-organic frameworks, such as UiO-66, produces a uniquely well-defined and homotopic catalytically active site. We present here the synthesis and characterization of a group of UiO-66-supported metal catalysts, M-UiO-66 (M = Ni, Co, Cu, and Cr), for the catalytic dimerization of alkenes. The hydrogen-deuterium exchange via deuterium oxide adsorption followed by infrared spectroscopy showed that the last molecular water ligand desorbs from the sites after evacuation at 300 °C leading to M(OH)-UiO-66 structures. Adsorption of 1-butene is studied using calorimetry and density functional theory techniques to characterize the interactions of the alkene with metal cation sites that are found active for alkene oligomerization. For the most active Ni-UiO-66, the removal of molecular water from the active site significantly increases the 1-butene adsorption enthalpy and almost doubles the catalytic activity for 1-butene dimerization in comparison to the presence of water ligands. Other M-UiO-66 (M = Co, Cu, and Cr) exhibit 1-3 orders of magnitude lower catalytic activities compared to Ni-UiO-66. The catalytic activities correlate linearly with the Gibbs free energy of 1-butene adsorption. Density functional theory calculations probing the Cossee-Arlman mechanism for all metals support the differences in activity, providing a molecular level understanding of the metal site as the active center for 1-butene dimerization.

Details

ISSN :
15205126 and 00027863
Volume :
145
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....52b9706fd73e8eb6e00de08fa68289d1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c12192