posted on 2015-04-23, 00:00authored byIstvan Halasz, Eric Senderov, David
H. Olson, Jian-Jie Liang
The removal of Al
with acid solution from a zeolite framework is
customarily associated with formation of framework defects known as
hydroxyl nests, but their existence has not been unambiguously confirmed
thus far. In a recent study on acid dealuminated Y zeolite, pre-exchanged
predominantly with Cs in order to ensure maximized elimination of
molecular water that can conceal hydrogen bonded OH groups, no indication
has been found for the presence of hydroxyl nests. We present here temperature-programmed desorption (TPD)
and Fourier transform infra-red (FTIR) evidence that such hydroxyl
nests cannot be identified in an approximately 20% acid dealuminated
and solely sodium re-exchanged zeolite NaY(-Al) that has not been
exposed to temperatures above 25 °C during and after dealumination.
These experimental conclusions were matched by results of combined
density functional theory (DFT)-based spectroscopic study and reactive-force
field molecular dynamics calculations on full periodic model zeolites.
They showed that (1) in contrast to the general view, the four hydroxyls
that would form a hydroxyl nest are energetically different from each
other as attested by their computed vibrational spectra; (2) the most
intense vibrations of hypothetical hydroxyl nests are missing from
the experimental FTIR spectra of the dealuminated NaY zeolite; and
(3) the Si–OH, O–H, and O–Na bonds dynamically
break and interact with each other already at 25 °C. Thus, we
conclude that even if hydroxyl nest formation would follow the Al-removal
from the Y zeolite lattice by acid leaching, its existence may be
ephemeral on a picosecond time scale.