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    On the role of the nature and density of acid sites on mesostructured aluminosilicates dehydration catalysts for dimethyl ether production from CO2

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    In this work, we designed four different mesostructured acidic materials to be used as methanol dehydration catalysts for the one-pot CO2-to-DME process, in the form of physical mixtures with a Cu/ZnO/Al2O3-based commercial redox catalyst (CZA). The studied systems consist in a mesostructured gamma-Al2O3 and three mesostructured aluminosilicates (namely Al-MCM-41, Al-SBA-15, and Al-SBA-16) with the same Si/Al ratio (= 15) but significantly different textural properties. The main goal of this work is to understand how the textural features can influence the acidic properties (typology, amount, strength, surface density) and, consequently, how catalytic performances can be correlated with acidic features. On this note, we found that the systems presenting both Bronsted and Lewis sites (namely the three aluminosilicates) show much better catalytic performances than gamma-Al2O3, that only features Lewis sites, thus implying that Bronsted sites are more active towards methanol dehydration than Lewis sites. The three aluminosilicates, despite presenting comparable amounts of Bronsted sites, show significantly different performances in terms of selectivity to DME; particularly, Al-SBA-16, the system with the lowest surface area, proved to be the most efficient catalyst. This finding led us to infer that, besides Bronsted acidity, a high surface density of acid sites is a key factor to obtain a high dehydration activity; being methanol dehydration a bi-molecular reaction, the close proximity of two acid sites would indeed favor the kinetics of the process
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