Liquid-phase processing of molecules using heterogeneous catalysts – an important strategy for obtaining renewable chemicals sustainably from biomass – involves reactions that occur at solid-liquid interfaces. In glucose isomerization catalyzed by basic faujasite zeolites, the catalytic activity depends strongly on the solvent composition: initially, it declines precipitously when water is mixed with a small amount of the organic co-solvent ?-valerolactone (GVL), then recovers as the GVL content increases. Using solid-state 13C NMR spectroscopy, we observed glucose isomers located inside the zeolite pores directly, and followed their transformations into fructose and mannose in real time. At low GVL concentrations, glucose is depleted in the zeolite pores relative to the liquid phase, while higher GVL concentrations in solution drive glucose inside the pores, resulting in up to a 32 enhancement in the local glucose concentration. Although their populations exchange rapidly, molecules present at the reactive interface experience a significantly different environment from the bulk solution.
Revised: July 1, 2020 |
Published: May 5, 2017
Citation
Qi L., R. Alamillo, W.A. Elliott, A. Andersen, D.W. Hoyt, E.D. Walter, and K. Han, et al. 2017.Operando solid-state NMR observations of solvent-mediated adsorption-reaction of carbohydrates in zeolites.ACS Catalysis 7, no. 5:3489-3500.PNNL-SA-119548.doi:10.1021/acscatal.7b01045