Influence of Nanoscale Intimacy and Zeolite Micropore Size on the Performance of Bifunctional Catalysts for n-Heptane Hydroisomerization

Publication date

2020-12-04

Authors

Oenema, JogchumISNI 0000000493301012
Harmel, JustineISNI 0000000506596914
Velez, Roxana PerezISNI 0000000524625686
Meijerink, Mark J.ISNI 0000000506827882
Eijsvogel, Willem
Poursaeidesfahani, Ali
Vlugt, T.J.H.ISNI 0000000395735335
Zecevic, J.ISNI 0000000396961692
de Jong, KrijnISNI 0000000116104048

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

In this study, Pt nanoparticles on zeolite/γ-Al2O3 composites (50/50 wt) were located either in the zeolite or on the γ-Al2O3 binder, hereby varying the average distance (intimacy) between zeolite acid sites and metal sites from “closest” to “nanoscale”. The catalytic performance of these catalysts was compared to physical mixtures of zeolite and Pt/γ-Al2O3 powders, which provide a “microscale” distance between sites. Several beneficial effects on catalytic activity and selectivity for n-heptane hydroisomerization were observed when Pt nanoparticles are located on the γ-Al2O3 binder in nanoscale proximity with zeolite acid sites, as opposed to Pt nanoparticles located inside zeolite crystals. On ZSM-5-based catalysts, mostly monobranched isomers were produced, and the isomer selectivity of these catalysts was almost unaffected with an intimacy ranging from closest to microscale, which can be attributed to the high diffusional barriers of branched isomers within ZSM-5 micropores. For composite catalysts based on large-pore zeolites (zeolite Beta and zeolite Y), the activity and selectivity benefitted from the nanoscale intimacy with Pt, compared to both the closest and microscale intimacies. Intracrystalline gradients of heptenes as reaction intermediates are likely contributors to differences in activity and selectivity. This paper aims to provide insights into the influence of the metal–acid intimacy in bifunctional catalysts based on zeolites with different framework topologies.

Keywords

bifunctional catalysts, intimacy, diffusion, zeolites, alkane hydroisomerization, molecular modeling

Citation

Oenema, J, Harmel, J, Velez, R P, Meijerink, M J, Eijsvogel, W, Poursaeidesfahani, A, Vlugt, T J H, Zecevic, J & de Jong, K P 2020, 'Influence of Nanoscale Intimacy and Zeolite Micropore Size on the Performance of Bifunctional Catalysts for n-Heptane Hydroisomerization', ACS Catalysis, vol. 10, no. 23, pp. 14245-14257. https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.0c03138