Impact of Calcination Temperature on Tungsten‐based Composite Catalysts for Olefins Metathesis

Author:

Wei Ning123,Zhang Dazhi1,Zhang Weiping3,Huang Shengjun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Fossil Energy Conversion Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics Chinese Academy of Sciences Dalian 116023 P. R. China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 P. R. China

3. State Key Laboratory of Fine Chemicals School of Chemical Engineering Dalian University of Technology Dalian 116024 P. R. China

Abstract

AbstractThe thermal treatment is one of the key procedures for the distribution and transformation of active sites for the supported metal oxide catalysts. However, the underlying impacts of thermal treatment on composite supported catalysts receives limited attention due to the additional complexity of the composite support. In this work, the progressive gradient in the metathesis activity, as the function of enhanced calcination temperature, has been observed for the tungsten‐based catalysts supported on the hierarchical ZSM‐5 zeolite‐alumina composite. The metathesis activity, reflected by ethene conversion, undergoes a stepwise growth from 24.2 % to 38.9 % along with the enhanced calcination temperature from 723 K to 923 K. The supported W‐oxo species share high similarity in structural states except their interaction with the Brønsted acidic bridge hydroxyl groups in zeolite. The density of bridge hydroxyl groups is reduced as the function of enhanced calcination temperatures, which reflects the intensified anchoring of surface W‐oxo species. It should be noted that such dependence is not observed for their counterparts based on microporous ZSM‐5 zeolite‐alumina. These sharp comparisons highlight the critical routes of thermal migration of W‐oxo species along the intrazeolite‐alumina interface in the evolution of active sites for the olefins cross‐metathesis reaction.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Catalysis

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