Role of Delamination in Zeolite-Catalyzed Aromatic
Alkylation: UCB‑3 versus 3‑D Al-SSZ-70
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Abstract
Delaminated zeolite UCB-3 exhibits
2.4-fold greater catalytic activity
relative to its three-dimensional (3D) zeolite counterpart, Al-SSZ-70,
and 2.0-fold greater activity (per catalyst mass) when compared with
industrial catalyst MCM-22, for the alkylation of toluene with propylene
at 523 K. The former increase is nearly equal to the observed relative
increase in external surface area and acid sites upon delamination.
However, at 423 K for the same reaction, UCB-3 exhibits a 3.5-fold
greater catalytic activity relative to 3D Al-SSZ-70. The higher relative
rate enhancement for the delaminated material at lower temperature
can be elucidated on the basis of increased contributions from internal
acid sites. Evidence of possible contributions from such acid sites
is
obtained by performing catalysis after silanation treatment, which
demonstrates that although virtually all catalysis in MCM-22 occurs
on the external surface, catalysis also occurs on internal sites for
3D Al-SSZ-70. The additional observed enhancement at low temperatures
can therefore be rationalized by greater access to internal active
sites as a result of sheet breakage during delamination. Such breakage
leads to shorter characteristic internal diffusion paths and was visualized
using TEM comparisons of UCB-3 and 3D Al-SSZ-70