Abstract

Sn and Ga doped zeolite Y catalysts were tested for the isomerization of glucose to fructose carried out in different solvents (water, methanol and ethanol). Therein, ethanol favoured a Lewis acid site catalyzed pathway that promotes glucose isomerization to fructose, whereas methanol resulted in an equal distribution of products (mannose, fructose and alkyl fructoside). In contrast, the catalysts were totally inactive in water solvent. NMR relaxation measurements, including solvent displacement experiments, suggested that the lack of catalytic activity in water is due to the strong adsorption of this solvent within the zeolite pores blocking reactants from the Lewis acid sites active for the sugar isomerization. In comparison, ethanol adsorbs relatively more strongly than methanol, hence is retained in the pores where solvated fructose is preferentially prevented from the further reaction on Brønsted acid sites situated outside of the pore space. NMR relaxation measurements using pyridine and tetrahydrofuran (THF) and pyridine-DRIFTS measurements suggest metal doping had little effect on the overall relative acid strength of the zeolites but resulted in zeolites with increased Lewis acid strength relative to the non-doped zeolites. The results reported provide direct experimental evidence on the importance of adsorption properties of solvents within zeolites used for glucose to fructose isomerization and may serve as a starting point for a new approach towards designing and optimizing such catalytic systems.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call