Abstract

The new zeolite, COE-11, was synthesized at 155 °C to 168 °C by hydrothermal synthesis from a reaction mixture of SiO2/tetraethylammonium hydroxide/H3BO3/NaOH/H2O. Because tetraethylammonium is an unspecific structure directing agent, COE-11 crystallizes in all cases together with at least one impurity phase from a selection of phases: zeolite types *BEA, CHA, FER, MFI, MOR, MTW; the layered silicates magadiite and kenyaite; and searlsite and silica polymorph quartz. The crystal structure was solved from 3D electron diffraction (3D ED) data. Subsequent structure refinements of X-ray powder diffraction (PXRD) data and single crystal electron diffraction data converged to residual values of RF = 0.039, chi2 = 3.6 (PXRD) and RF = 21.81% (3D ED) confirming the structure model. COE-11 crystallizes in space group C2 with unit cell dimensions of a0 = 17.3494(11) Å, b0 = 17.3409(11) Å, c0 = 14.2789(4) Å and β = 113.762(2) °. The structure of COE-11 is characterized by a microporous borosilicate framework with intersecting, highly elliptical 12-ring channels running parallel (110) and (1–10) and forming a two-dimensional pore system. The Rietveld refinement provided a hint that boron partly substitutes silicon on three specific T sites of the framework. The idealized chemical composition of as-made COE-11 is [(CH3CH2)4N]4[B4Si62O132] per unit cell. Physico-chemical characterization using solid-state NMR spectroscopy, SEM, TG-DTA, and ATR-FTIR spectroscopy confirmed that COE-11 is a microporous borosilicate zeolite. COE-11 is structurally closely related to zeolite beta polymorph B but differs concerning the dimensionality of the pore system, which is 2D instead of 3D.

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