Nanoparticle Approaches to Zeolitic Catalysts
Lead Research Organisation:
University of St Andrews
Department Name: Chemistry
Abstract
Zeolites (porous aluminosilicates) are some of the most important industrial catalysts. There is worldwide recognition of the importance of manipulating zeolites to give improved functionality. The journal Science (2011, 334, 1629) rated this area of current research as one of the 10 most important. This proposal looks to completely change the way we think about the preparation of zeolite catalysts. This will be done through a completely new approach of taking a known zeolite of specific structure and chemistry, and selectively diassembling the solid into precisely defined nanoparticles which can then be reassembled into new materials. The key concept is that certain substituents in zeolites (particularly Ge) are naturally located in specific areas of the structure and are also hydrolytically unstable compared to Al/Si. This means that we can put Ge into only certain places in a zeolite, and then dissolve it out again to diassemble the zeolite into nanostructured particles. The key to the reassembly is that the nanoparticles have originated from a fully condensed zeolite, which means they are geometrically compatible with reassembly - this is not true for directly synthesised nanoparticles. This is a transformative approach to making zeolites because it offers an entirely new mechanism, will produce novel structures and will change the thinking in how zeolites can be made. The chemistry of the disassembly means that one cannot reassemble into the original structure - you will be guaranteed a different one. We also propose that these structures should be predictable - the goal of a designer zeolite for applications is one of the holy grails of the field.
Planned Impact
Why is this transformative science and what impact will it have? The scientific activity described in this proposal represents a novel fundamental concept in porous materials science. As such there is significant potential for extremely high quality publications and significant impact. As described Science has listed the manipulation of zeolite catalysts as one of the ten most exciting areas of research, and this activity offers a completely new concept in this important area that offers the potential to prepare many hitherto unknown catalytic materials. I would expect the impact of such a novel method to be extremely significant in academia, but that interest will also be high in industry.
The use of zeolites in the chemicals industry is a well known and extensively used technology. In the very recent past there has, however, been a significant drive all around the world improve features like accessibility to increase the effectiveness of zeolite catalysts (highlighted by Science as described in the Case for Support). This type of research is likely to be of interest to larger companies. As well as the opportunity to prepare new solids, the proposed work also has the potential for improving the stability of interesting, but at present useless, solids via the process. Oil, energy and chemicals companies such as BP, Shell, Chevron, Sasol etc have all got significant commercial interests in the application of zeolites. A successful completion of this work will be of interest to such entities and dissemination of our results (under confidentiality agreements as necessary) will be completed to ensure maximum impact is achieved.
The use of zeolites in the chemicals industry is a well known and extensively used technology. In the very recent past there has, however, been a significant drive all around the world improve features like accessibility to increase the effectiveness of zeolite catalysts (highlighted by Science as described in the Case for Support). This type of research is likely to be of interest to larger companies. As well as the opportunity to prepare new solids, the proposed work also has the potential for improving the stability of interesting, but at present useless, solids via the process. Oil, energy and chemicals companies such as BP, Shell, Chevron, Sasol etc have all got significant commercial interests in the application of zeolites. A successful completion of this work will be of interest to such entities and dissemination of our results (under confidentiality agreements as necessary) will be completed to ensure maximum impact is achieved.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Russell Morris (Principal Investigator) |
Publications
Bignami G
(2018)
Cost-effective 17 O enrichment and NMR spectroscopy of mixed-metal terephthalate metal-organic frameworks
in Chemical Science
Bignami GPM
(2017)
Synthesis, Isotopic Enrichment, and Solid-State NMR Characterization of Zeolites Derived from the Assembly, Disassembly, Organization, Reassembly Process.
in Journal of the American Chemical Society
Mazur M
(2018)
Pressure-induced chemistry for the 2D to 3D transformation of zeolites
in Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Mazur M
(2016)
Synthesis of 'unfeasible' zeolites.
in Nature chemistry
McHugh L
(2018)
Hydrolytic stability in hemilabile metal-organic frameworks
in Nature Chemistry
Morris R
(2015)
Exploiting chemically selective weakness in solids as a route to new porous materials
in Nature Chemistry
Morris R
(2016)
Synthesis of Zeolites Using the ADOR (Assembly-Disassembly-Organization-Reassembly) Route
in Journal of Visualized Experiments
Morris SA
(2017)
In situ solid-state NMR and XRD studies of the ADOR process and the unusual structure of zeolite IPC-6.
in Nature chemistry
Shamzhy M
(2015)
Post-synthesis incorporation of Al into germanosilicate ITH zeolites: the influence of treatment conditions on the acidic properties and catalytic behavior in tetrahydropyranylation
in Catalysis Science & Technology
Shamzhy M
(2014)
Germanosilicate Precursors of ADORable Zeolites Obtained by Disassembly of ITH, ITR, and IWR Zeolites
in Chemistry of Materials
Description | We developed a new method of manufacturing very small particles of zeolites, and important catalyst. |
Exploitation Route | We are developing this at the present and will be the subject of further funding applications. |
Sectors | Chemicals Healthcare |
Title | Cost-Effective 17O Enrichment and NMR Spectroscopy of Mixed- Metal Terephthalate Metal-Organic Frameworks (dataset) |
Description | |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2017 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Title | Data Underpinning: Synthesis of 'unfeasible' zeolites |
Description | |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2015 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Title | Data underpinning "In situ solid-state NMR and XRD studies of the ADOR process and the unusual structure of zeolite IPC-6" |
Description | |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2017 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Title | Hydrolytic stability in hemilabile metal-organic frameworks (dataset) |
Description | |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2019 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Title | Pressure-induced chemistry for the 2D to 3D transformation of zeolites (dataset) |
Description | |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2019 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Title | Synthesis, Isotopic Enrichment and Solid-State NMR Characterization of Zeolites Derived from the Assembly, Disassembly, Organisation, Reassembly Process (dataset) |
Description | |
Type Of Material | Database/Collection of data |
Year Produced | 2017 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |