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Published January 29, 2014 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Studies of Aluminum Reinsertion into Borosilicate Zeolites with Intersecting Channels of 10- and 12-Ring Channel Systems

Abstract

The work here describes the kinetic analyses of aluminum replacement for boron in a suite of borosilicate molecular sieves. While the method has been described before as a means of converting synthesized borosilicates (with weak inherent acidity) to aluminosilicates (with much stronger acid strength) when there are large pores in the structure, here we carry out the transformation under less than optimal replacement concentrations, in order to better follow the kinetics. We examined several zeolite structures with boundary conditions of boron MEL where there are only 10-ring (or intermediate) pore structures and no Al is taken up, to multidimensional large pore zeolites, like boron beta, where Al substitution can occur everywhere. We also studied materials with both intermediate and large pores, SSZ-56, 57, 70, and 82. In the case of 57 up to 90% of the structure is made up of boron MEL. We observe that the pH drop is proportional to the Al reinsertion and is the same for all zeolites we studied. In one case, we compared a zeolite (SSZ-24) with boron and then no boron sites and found that Al does not go into defect sites. It was again confirmed (shown in earlier work) that Al will go into nest sites created by boron hydrolysis out of the substrate before Al treatment. Along those lines we also made two new observations: (1) the profile for Al uptake, as followed by pH drop, is the same kinetically, whether the boron is there or not; and (2) NMR showed that the boron is leaving the structure faster than Al can go back in (SSZ-33 study), even when we treat a material with boron in the lattice.

Additional Information

© 2014 American Chemical Society. Received: October 7, 2013. Published: January 8, 2014. Publication Date (Web): January 8, 2014. We thank the management of Chevron's Catalyst Department, Charles Wilson, Bob Saxton, and Georgie Scheuerman for support of this research. We thank Dr. Ming Ting Xu (Chevron) for useful discussion on the pH versus Al uptake relationships in our data. We thank Dr. Christopher Lew (Chevron) for the sample of UCB-4. Support of the NMR facility at Caltech (Beckmann Center) is through NSF grant no. 9724240 and MRSEC Program award no. DMR-520565.

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