Abstract
Co-feeding an inert
and site-selective chemical titrant provides desirable selectivity tuning when titrant
adsorption is favored over side reaction pathways on a solid acid catalyst.
Here, a selectivity enhancement from 61 to 84 C % was demonstrated for methyl
lactate dehydration to methyl acrylate and acrylic acid over NaY zeolite
catalyst using amines as the co-fed titrants to suppress side reactions on in
situ generated Brønsted acid sites (BAS). The effectiveness of BAS titration
was evaluated by considering both the basicity and steric properties of the
titrant molecule with the goal to maximize the selectivity enhancement. The
presence of electron-donating alkyl functional groups enhances amine basicity
but also introduces additional steric constraints to the molecule with respect
to the pore dimensions of the NaY zeolite. While higher basicity of titrant
amines favors stronger adsorption on BAS, steric limitations hinder site
binding through contributions from internal diffusion limitations and local
steric repulsion between titrant and the zeolite wall around the BAS. Titrant
bases with proton affinities above ~1040 kJ/mol and sizes below 85% of the NaY
supercage window or pore diameter are predicted to afford dehydration
selectivities above 90 C % to acrylate products.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information Acrylic Dauenhauer
Description
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