Abstract

Natural zeolite clinoptilolite CLIN with a framework ratio of Si/Al ≥ 4 containing mainly potassium and calcium ions in its internal channel system was used as a starting material. The acidic HCLIN catalysts were prepared under soft conditions avoiding the use of environmental less-benign mineral acids. The starting material was ion exchanged using a 0.2 M aqueous ammonium nitrate solution at a temperature 80 °C for 2 h. The obtained NH4CLIN was converted into the acid HCLIN catalyst by calcination at 300–600 °C. The obtained samples were characterized by XRD, FTIR, SEM/TEM, AAS, and EDX element mapping. The state of aluminium and silicon was studied by 27Al- and 29SiMAS NMR spectroscopy. The textural properties of the catalysts were investigated by nitrogen adsorption and desorption measurements. The Brønsted acidity of the HCLIN catalysts was studied by temperature-programmed decomposition of the exchanged ammonium ions releasing ammonia as well as 1H MAS NMR, {1H–27Al} Trapdor, and {1H–27Al} Redor experiments. The strongly agglomerated samples were crystalline and thermally stable up to >500 °C. Although a part of the clinoptilolite framework is maintained up to 600 °C, a loss of crystallinity is already observed starting from 450 °C. The specific surface areas of the starting CLIN and ammonium exchanged NH4CLIN are low with ca. 26 m2/g. The pores are nearly blocked by the exchangeable cations located in the zeolite pores. The thermal decomposition of the ammonium ions by calcination at 400 °C causes an opening of the pore entrances and a markable increase in the specific micropore area and micropore volume to ca. 163 m2/g and 0.07 cm3/g, respectively. It decreases with further rising calcination temperature indicating some structural loss. The catalysts show a broad distribution of Brønsted acid sites (BS) ranging from weak to strong sites as indicated the thermal decomposition of exchanged ammonium ions (TPDA). The ammonium ion decomposition leaving BS, i.e., H+ located at Al–O–Si framework bridges, starts at ≥250 °C. A part of the Brønsted sites is lost after calcination specifically at 500 °C. It is related to the formation of penta-coordinated aluminium at the expense of tetrahedral framework aluminium. The Brønsted sites are partially recreated after repeated ammonium ion exchange. The catalytic performance of the acidic HCLIN catalysts was tested in the etherification of glycerol as a green renewable resource with different C1-C4 alcohols. The catalysts are highly active in the etherification of glycerol, especially with alcohols containing the branched, tertiary alkyl groups. Highest activity is observed with the soft activated catalyst HCLIN300 (300 °C, temperature holding time: 1 min). A total of 78% conversion of glycerol to mono and di ether were achieved with tert-butanol at 140 °C after 4 h of reaction. The mono- and di-ether selectivity were 75% and 25%, respectively. The catalyst can be reused.

Highlights

  • The boosting use of transportation fuel and the other energies is faced with the limited availability of fossil fuel resources and climate change due to global warming, which is fired by the increasing emissions of carbon dioxide [1,2]

  • The chemical composition of the starting material and of the ammonium exchanged clinoptilolite was analysed by AAS (Table 1)

  • The exchange of the zeolitic cations by ammonium ions in solutions leads to a decrease preferentially of the concentration potassium ions and calcium ions in the framework of NH4CLIN [18]

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Summary

Introduction

The boosting use of transportation fuel and the other energies is faced with the limited availability of fossil fuel resources and climate change due to global warming, which is fired by the increasing emissions of carbon dioxide [1,2] Both facts require the enhanced use of renewable feedstock, which would decrease the use of limited fossils and, most importantly, reduce the emission of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere by CO2 cycling via photosynthesis [3]. The synthesis of glycerol tert-butyl ether by etherification reaction requires the use of acid catalysts [7,8,9,10,11]. Heterogeneous acid catalysts are in the focus of interest

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