Solvent molecules alter the free energies of liquid phase species and adsorbed intermediates during catalytic reactions, thereby impacting rates and selectivities. Here, we examine these effects through the epoxidation of 1-hexene (CH) with hydrogen peroxide (HO) over hydrophilic and hydrophobic Ti-BEA zeolites immersed in aqueous solvent mixtures (acetonitrile, methanol, and γ-butyrolactone). Greater HO mole fractions provide greater epoxidation rates, lower HO decomposition rates, and hence improved HO selectivities to the desired epoxide product in each combination of solvent and zeolite. The mechanisms for epoxidation and HO decomposition remain constant across solvent compositions; however, HO activates reversibly in protic solutions. Differences in rates and selectivities reflect the disproportionate stabilization of transition states within zeolite pores with respect to surface intermediates and fluid phase reactants, as evinced by turnover rates normalized by the activity coefficients of CH and HO. Opposing trends in activation barriers suggest that the hydrophobic epoxidation transition state disrupts hydrogen bonds with solvent molecules, while the hydrophilic decomposition transition state forms hydrogen bonds with surrounding solvent molecules. Solvent compositions and adsorption volumes within pores, from H NMR spectroscopy and vapor adsorption, depend on the composition of the bulk solution and the density of silanol defects within pores. Strong correlations between epoxidation activation enthalpies and epoxide adsorption enthalpies from isothermal titration calorimetry indicate that the reorganization of solvent molecules (and associated entropy gains) required to accommodate transition states provides the most significant contribution to the stability of transition states that determine rates and selectivities. These results demonstrate that replacing a portion of organic solvents with HO offers opportunities to increase rates and selectivities for zeolite-catalyzed reactions while reducing usage of organic solvents for chemical manufacturing.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10034100 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sc06473a | DOI Listing |
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