These coffin-shaped growths make up one
variety of porous materials called zeolites. An international team of
scientists discovered that when aluminum atoms in the material cluster
in the overlapping intersections of these sub-units, zeolites lose their
ability to convert oil to gasoline and other chemicals.
Credit: PNNL
Despite decades of industrial use, the exact
chemical transformations occurring within zeolites, a common material
used in the conversion of oil to gasoline, remain poorly understood. Now
scientists have found a way to locate--with atomic precision--spots
within the material where chemical reactions take place, and how these
spots shut down.
Called active sites, the spots help rip apart and rearrange molecules
as they pass through nanometer-sized channels, like an assembly line in
a factory. A process called steaming causes these active sites to
cluster, effectively shutting down the factory, the scientists reported
in Nature Communications. This knowledge could help devise how
to keep the factory running longer, so to speak, and improve catalysts
that help produce fuel, biofuel and other chemicals.
The team included scientists from the Department of Energy's Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory, petroleum refining technology company UOP
LLC and Utrecht University. To make this discovery, they reconstructed
the first 3-D atomic map of an industrially relevant zeolite material to
track down its key element, aluminum.
When things get steamy, structure changes
Zeolites are minerals made up of aluminum, silicon and oxygen atoms
arranged in a three-dimensional crystalline structure. Though they look
like white powder to the naked eye, zeolites have a sponge-like network
of molecule-size pores. Aluminum atoms along these pores act like
workers on an assembly line--they create active sites that give zeolites
their catalytic properties.
Industry uses about a dozen synthetic zeolites as catalysts to
process petroleum and chemicals. One major conversion process, called
fluid catalytic cracking, depends on zeolites to produce the majority of
the world's gasoline.
To awaken active sites within zeolites, industry pretreats the
material with heat and water, a process called steaming. But too much
steaming somehow switches the sites off. Changing the conditions of
steaming could extend the catalyst's life, thus producing fuel more
efficiently.
Scientists have long suspected that steaming causes aluminum to move
around within the material, thus changing its properties. But until now
aluminum has evaded detailed analysis.
Strip away the atoms
Most studies of zeolite structure rely on electron microscopy, which
can't easily distinguish aluminum from silicon because of their similar
masses. Worse, the instrument's intense electron beam tends to damage
the material, changing its inherent structure before it's seen.
Instead, the team of scientists turned to a characterization
technique that had never before been successfully applied to zeolites.
Called atom probe tomography, it works by zapping a sample with a
pulsing laser, providing just enough energy to knock off one atom at a
time. Time-of-flight mass spectrometers analyze each atom--at a rate of
about 1,000 atoms per second. Unlike an electron microscope, this
technique can distinguish aluminum from silicon.
Though atom probe tomography has been around for 50 years, it was
originally designed to look at conductive materials, such as metals.
Less conductive zeolites presented a problem.
PNNL materials scientist Danny Perea and his colleagues overcame this
hurdle by adapting a Local Electrode Atom Probe at EMSL, the
Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a DOE Office of Science
User Facility accessible to scientists around the world. Most attempts
to image the material ended prematurely, when electromagnetic forces
within the instrument vaporized the entire sample. The key to success
was to find the right conditions to prepare a sample and then to coat it
with a layer of metal to help provide conductivity and strength to
withstand analysis.
After hours of blasting tens-of-millions of atoms, the scientists
could reconstruct an atomic map of a sample about a thousand times
smaller than the width of a human hair. These maps hold clues as to why
the catalyst fails.
A place to cluster
The images confirmed what scientists have long suspected: Steaming
causes aluminum atoms to cluster. Like workers crowded around one spot
on the assembly line, this clustering effectively shuts down the
catalytic factory.
The scientists even pinpointed the place where aluminum likes to
cluster. Zeolite crystals often grow in overlapping sub-units, forming
something like a 3-D Venn diagram. Scientists call the edge between two
sub-units a grain boundary, and that's where the aluminum clustered. The
scientists suspect that open space along grain boundaries attracted the
aluminum.
With the guidance of these atomic maps, industry could one day modify
how it steams zeolites to produce a more efficient, longer lasting
catalyst. The research team will next examine other industrially
important zeolites at different stages of steaming to provide a more
detailed map of this transformation.
This research was supported by the Netherlands Research School
Combination-Catalysis, the Netherlands Research Council and PNNL's
Laboratory Directed Research Development program.
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