Abstract

Revisiting the impact of the first and often deemed trivial postsynthetic step, i.e., a high-temperature oxidative calcination to remove organic templates, increases our understanding of thermal acid site evolution and Al distributions. An unprecedented degree of control over the acidity of high-silica zeolites (SSZ-13) was achieved by using a low-temperature ozonation approach. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of adsorbed probe molecules and solid-state NMR spectroscopy reveal the complexity of the thermal evolution of acid sites. Low-temperature activated (ozonated) zeolites maintain the original Brønsted acidity content and high defect content and have virtually no Lewis acidity. They also preserve the "as-made" Al distribution after crystallization and show a clear link between synthesis conditions and divalent cation capacity, as measured with aqueous cobalt ion uptake. The synthesis protocol is found to be the main contributor to Al proximity, yielding record high exchange capacity when ozonated. After conventional calcination at 500-600 °C, however, the presence of water leads to the gradual depletion of Brønsted acid sites, in particular, in small crystals. This work indicates that low-temperature ozonation followed by thermal activation at different temperatures can be used as a novel tool for tuning the amount and nature of acid sites, providing insights into the activity of zeolites in acid-catalyzed reactions, such as CO2 hydrogenation to dimethyl ether, and thereby expanding the possibilities of rational acidity tuning.

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