Consequences of Acid Strength for Isomerization and Elimination Catalysis on Solid Acids

被引:142
|
作者
Macht, Josef [1 ]
Carr, Robert T. [1 ]
Iglesia, Enrique [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Chem Engn, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY; N-HEXANE; KINETICS; HYDROISOMERIZATION; STABILITIES; ALKANES; ION;
D O I
10.1021/ja900829x
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
We address here the manner in which acid catalysis senses the strength of solid acids. Acid strengths for Keggin polyoxometalate (POM) clusters and zeolites, chosen because of their accurately known structures, are described rigorously by their deprotonation energies (IDPE). Mechanistic interpretations of the measured dynamics of alkane isomerization and alkanol dehydration are used to obtain rate and equilibrium constants and energies for intermediates and transition states and to relate them to acid strength. n-Hexane isomerization rates were limited by isomerization of alkoxide intermediates on bifunctional metal-acid mixtures designed to maintain alkane-alkene equilibrium. Isomerization rate constants were normalized by the number of accessible protons, measured by titration with 2,6-di-tert-butylpyridine during catalysis. Equilibrium constants for alkoxides formed by protonation of n-hexene increased slightly with deprotonation energies (DPE), while isomerization rate constants decreased and activation barriers increased with increasing DPE, as also shown for alkanol dehydration reactions. These trends are consistent with thermochemical analyses of the transition states involved in isomerization and elimination steps. For all reactions, barriers increased by less than the concomitant increase in DPE upon changes in composition, because electrostatic stabilization of ion-pairs at the relevant transition states becomes more effective for weaker acids, as a result of their higher charge density at the anionic conjugate base. Alkoxide isomerization barriers were more sensitive to DPE than for elimination from H-bonded alkanols, the step that limits 2-butanol and 1-butanol dehydration rates; the latter two reactions showed similar DPE sensitivities, despite significant differences in their rates and activation barriers, indicating that slower reactions are not necessarily more sensitive to acid strength, but instead reflect the involvement of more unstable organic cations at their transition states. These compensating effects from electrostatic stabilization depend on how similar the charge density in these organic cations is to that in the proton removed. Cations with more localized charge favor strong electrostatic interactions with anions and form more stable ionic structures than do cations with more diffuse charges. Ion-pairs at elimination transition states contain cations with higher local charge density at the sp(2) carbon than for isomerization transition states; as a result, these ion-pairs recover a larger fraction of the deprotonation energy, and, consequently, their reactions become less sensitive to acid strength. These concepts lead us to conclude that the energetic difficulty of a catalytic reaction, imposed by gas-phase reactant proton affinities in transition state analogues, does not determine its sensitivity to the acid strength of solid catalysts.
引用
收藏
页码:6554 / 6565
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] PHYS 468-Consequences of acid strength in isomerization and elimination catalysis on solid acids
    Macht, Josef
    Carr, Robert
    Janik, Michael J.
    Neurock, Matthew
    Iglesia, Enrique
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2009, 237
  • [2] Solid acid catalysis of tandem isomerization-lactonization of olefinic acids
    Zhou, Yibo
    Woo, L. Keith
    Angelici, Robert J.
    APPLIED CATALYSIS A-GENERAL, 2007, 333 (02) : 238 - 244
  • [3] Strength of liquid acids in solution and on solid supports. The anion stabilization by solvent and its consequences for catalysis
    Farcasiu, D
    Ghenciu, A
    Marino, G
    Kastrup, RV
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR CATALYSIS A-CHEMICAL, 1997, 126 (2-3) : 141 - 150
  • [4] Solid acids: Green alternatives for acid catalysis
    Gupta, Princy
    Paul, Satya
    CATALYSIS TODAY, 2014, 236 : 153 - 170
  • [6] Solid acids, surface acidity and heterogeneous acid catalysis
    Busca, Guido
    Gervasini, Antonella
    ADVANCES IN CATALYSIS, VOL 67, 2020, 67 : 1 - 90
  • [7] Kinetic consequences of hydrophobic voids in Lewis acid zeolites for glucose isomerization catalysis in liquid water
    Cordon, Michael
    Harris, James
    Vega-Vila, Juan
    Ribeiro, Fabio
    Gounder, Rajamani
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2016, 251
  • [8] Quantification of Intraporous Hydrophilic Binding Sites in Lewis Acid Zeolites and Consequences for Sugar Isomerization Catalysis
    Vega-Vila, Juan Carlos
    Gounder, Rajamani
    ACS CATALYSIS, 2020, 10 (20) : 12197 - 12211
  • [9] A perspective on catalysis in solid acids
    Gorte, Raymond J.
    Crossley, Steven P.
    JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS, 2019, 375 : 524 - 530
  • [10] Heterogeneous catalysis in solid acids
    White, Jeffery L.
    Truitt, Matthew J.
    PROGRESS IN NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY, 2007, 51 (02) : 139 - 154