10.25394/PGS.7464596.v1 Arthur J. Shih Arthur J. Shih Synthesis and Characterization of Copper-Exchanged Zeolite Catalysts and Kinetic Studies on NOx Selective Catalytic Reduction with Ammonia Purdue University Graduate School 2019 catalysis reaction kinetics reaction mechanisms selective catalytic reduction zeolite SSZ-13 titration active site spectroscopy density functional theory computation chabazite copper sulfur operando ammonia nitrogen oxides Catalysis and Mechanisms of Reactions Environmental Chemistry Reaction Kinetics and Dynamics Chemical Engineering not elsewhere classified Synthesis of Materials 2019-01-16 14:59:39 Thesis https://hammer.purdue.edu/articles/thesis/Synthesis_and_Characterization_of_Copper-Exchanged_Zeolite_Catalysts_and_Kinetic_Studies_on_NOx_Selective_Catalytic_Reduction_with_Ammonia/7464596 <p>Although Cu-SSZ-13 zeolites are used commercially in diesel engine exhaust after-treatment for abatement of toxic NO<sub>x</sub> pollutants via selective catalytic reduction (SCR) with NH<sub>3</sub>, molecular details of its active centers and mechanistic details of the redox reactions they catalyze, specifically of the Cu(I) to Cu(II) oxidation half-reaction, are not well understood. A detailed understanding of the SCR reaction mechanism and nature of the Cu active site would provide insight into their catalytic performance and guidance on synthesizing materials with improved low temperature (< 473 K) reactivity and stability against deactivation (e.g. hydrothermal, sulfur oxides). We use computational, titration, spectroscopic, and kinetic techniques to elucidate (1) the presence of two types of Cu<sup>2+</sup> ions in Cu-SSZ-13 materials, (2) molecular details on how these Cu cations, facilitated by NH<sub>3</sub> solvation, undergo a reduction-oxidation catalytic cycle, and (3) that sulfur oxides poison the two different types of Cu<sup>2+</sup> ions to different extents at via different mechanisms. </p><p><br></p> <p> </p> <p>Copper was exchanged onto H-SSZ-13 samples with different Si:Al ratios (4.5, 15, and 25) via liquid-phase ion exchange using Cu(NO<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub> as the precursor. The speciation of copper started from the most stable Cu<sup>2+</sup> coordinated to two anionic sites on the zeolite framework to [CuOH]<sup>+</sup> coordinated to only one anionic site on the zeolite framework with increasing Cu:Al ratios. The number of Cu<sup>2+</sup> and [CuOH]<sup>+</sup> sites was quantified by selective NH<sub>3</sub> titration of the number of residual Brønsted acid sites after Cu exchange, and by quantification of Brønsted acidic Si(OH)Al and CuOH stretching vibrations from IR spectra. Cu-SSZ-13 with similar Cu densities and anionic framework site densities exhibit similar standard SCR rates, apparent activation energies, and orders regardless of the fraction of Z<sub>2</sub>Cu and ZCuOH sites, indicating that both sites are equally active within measurable error for SCR. </p><p><br></p> <p> </p> <p>The standard SCR reaction uses O<sub>2</sub> as the oxidant (4NH<sub>3</sub> + 4NO + O<sub>2</sub> -> 6H<sub>2</sub>O + 4N<sub>2</sub>) and involves a Cu(I)/Cu(II) redox cycle, with Cu(II) reduction mediated by NO and NH<sub>3</sub>, and Cu(I) oxidation mediated by NO and O<sub>2</sub>. In contrast, the fast SCR reaction (4NH<sub>3</sub> + 2NO + 2NO<sub>2</sub> -> 6H<sub>2</sub>O + 4N<sub>2</sub>) uses NO<sub>2</sub> as the oxidant. Low temperature (437 K) standard SCR reaction kinetics over Cu-SSZ-13 zeolites depend on the spatial density and distribution of Cu ions, varied by changing the Cu:Al and Si:Al ratio. Facilitated by NH<sub>3</sub> solvation, mobile Cu(I) complexes can dimerize with other Cu(I) complexes within diffusion distances to activate O<sub>2</sub>, as demonstrated through X-ray absorption spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. Monte Carlo simulations are used to define average Cu-Cu distances. In contrast with O<sub>2</sub>-assisted oxidation reactions, NO<sub>2</sub> oxidizes single Cu(I) complexes with similar kinetics among samples of varying Cu spatial density. These findings demonstrate that low temperature standard SCR is dependent on Cu spatial density and requires NH<sub>3</sub> solvation to mobilize Cu(I) sites to activate O<sub>2</sub>, while in contrast fast SCR uses NO<sub>2</sub> to oxidize single Cu(I) sites. </p><p><br></p> <p> </p> <p>We also studied the effect of sulfur oxides, a common poison in diesel exhaust, on Cu-SSZ-13 zeolites. Model Cu-SSZ-13 samples exposed to dry SO<sub>2</sub> and O<sub>2</sub> streams at 473 and 673 K. These Cu-SSZ-13 zeolites were synthesized and characterized to contain distinct Cu active site types, predominantly either divalent Cu<sup>2+</sup> ions exchanged at proximal framework Al sites (Z<sub>2</sub>Cu), or monovalent CuOH+ complexes exchanged at isolated framework Al sites (ZCuOH). On the model Z<sub>2</sub>Cu sample, SCR turnover rates (473 K, per Cu) catalyst decreased linearly with increasing S content to undetectable values at equimolar S:Cu molar ratios, while apparent activation energies remained constant at ~65 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>, consistent with poisoning of each Z<sub>2</sub>Cu site with one SO<sub>2</sub>-derived intermediate. On the model ZCuOH sample, SCR turnover rates also decreased linearly with increasing S content, yet apparent activation energies decreased monotonically from ~50 to ~10 kJ mol<sup>-1</sup>, suggesting that multiple phenomena are responsible for the observed poisoning behavior and consistent with findings that SO<sub>2</sub> exposure led to additional storage of SO<sub>2</sub>-derived intermediates on non-Cu surface sites. Changes to Cu<sup>2+</sup> charge transfer features in UV-Visible spectra were more pronounced for SO<sub>2</sub>-poisoned ZCuOH than Z<sub>2</sub>Cu sites, while X-ray diffraction and micropore volume measurements show evidence of partial occlusion of microporous voids by SO<sub>2</sub>-derived deposits, suggesting that deactivation may not only reflect Cu site poisoning. Density functional theory calculations are used to identify the structures and binding energies of different SO<sub>2</sub>-derived intermediates at Z<sub>2</sub>Cu and ZCuOH sites. It is found that bisulfates are particularly low in energy, and residual Brønsted protons are liberated as these bisulfates are formed. These findings indicate that Z<sub>2</sub>Cu sites are more resistant to SO<sub>2</sub> poisoning than ZCuOH sites, and are easier to regenerate once poisoned. </p>