Entrapped Single Tungstate Site in Zeolite for Cooperative Catalysis of Olefin Metathesis with Brønsted Acid Site.

Title Entrapped Single Tungstate Site in Zeolite for Cooperative Catalysis of Olefin Metathesis with Brønsted Acid Site.
Authors P. Zhao; L. Ye; Z. Sun; B.T.W. Lo; H. Woodcock; C. Huang; C. Tang; A.I. Kirkland; D. Mei; S.Chi Edman Tsang
Journal J Am Chem Soc
DOI 10.1021/jacs.8b03012
Abstract

Industrial olefin metathesis catalysts generally suffer from low reaction rates and require harsh reaction conditions for moderate activities. This is due to their inability to prevent metathesis active sites (MASs) from aggregation and their intrinsic poor adsorption and activation of olefin molecules. Here, isolated tungstate species as single molecular MASs are immobilized inside zeolite pores by Brønsted acid sites (BASs) on the inner surface. It is demonstrated that unoccupied BASs in atomic proximity to MASs enhance olefin adsorption and facilitate the formation of metallocycle intermediates in a stereospecific manner. Thus, effective cooperative catalysis takes place over the BAS-MAS pair inside the zeolite cavity. In consequence, for the cross-metathesis of ethene and trans-2-butene to propene, under mild reaction conditions, the propene production rate over WO /USY is ca. 7300 times that over the industrial WO/SiO-based catalyst. A propene yield up to 79% (80% selectivity) without observable deactivation was obtained over WO /USY for a wide range of reaction conditions.

Citation P. Zhao; L. Ye; Z. Sun; B.T.W. Lo; H. Woodcock; C. Huang; C. Tang; A.I. Kirkland; D. Mei; S.Chi Edman Tsang.Entrapped Single Tungstate Site in Zeolite for Cooperative Catalysis of Olefin Metathesis with Brønsted Acid Site.. J Am Chem Soc. 2018;140(21):66616667. doi:10.1021/jacs.8b03012

Related Elements

Tungsten

See more Tungsten products. Tungsten (atomic symbol: W, atomic number: 74) is a Block D, Group 6, Period 6 element with an atomic weight of 183.84. The number of electrons in each of tungsten's shells is [2, 8, 18, 32, 12, 2] and its electron configuration is [Xe] 4f14 5d4 6s2. Tungsten Bohr ModelThe tungsten atom has a radius of 139 pm and a Van der Waals radius of 210 pm. Tungsten was discovered by Torbern Bergman in 1781 and first isolated by Juan José Elhuyar and Fausto Elhuyar in 1783. In its elemental form, tungsten has a grayish white, lustrous appearance. Elemental TungstenTungsten has the highest melting point of all the metallic elements and a density comparable to that or uranium or gold and about 1.7 times that of lead. Tungsten alloys are often used to make filaments and targets of x-ray tubes. It is found in the minerals scheelite (CaWO4) and wolframite [(Fe,Mn)WO4]. In reference to its density, Tungsten gets its name from the Swedish words tung and sten, meaning heavy stone.

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