标题及版权

R. Carr
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文利用密度泛函理论(DFT)对酸强度(作为去质子化能,DPE)和反应能的估计,结合Keggin多金属氧酸酯(POM)簇和沸石H-BEA的速率数据,研究了酸对CH3OH脱水的影响。测定的一阶(kmono)和零阶(kdimer) CH3OH脱水速率常数与聚甲醛(POM)簇的DPE呈指数关系;kmono的值比kdimer更强烈地依赖于DPE。这些速率参数的化学意义及其依赖酸强度的基础是通过使用DFT估计与测量速率方程一致的基本步骤中涉及的中间产物和过渡态的能量来建立的。我们由此得出结论,CH3OH脱水是通过共吸附CH3OH分子与相关固体酸和反应条件的直接反应进行的。在离子对过渡态形成的甲基阳离子,在这些直接途径中,比在甲氧基形成和随后与CH3OH反应的交替顺序途径中,更有效地被H2O和CH3OH溶解。由于共轭阴离子簇的稳定性与DPE之间存在相关关系,因此作为固体酸的中间产物和过渡态的离子对的稳定性对DPE有敏感的依赖性。基于机理的速率方程对kmono和kdimer的化学解释,以及它们各自过渡态形成的热化学循环表明,kdimer在中间态和过渡态中相似的电荷分布导致其对DPE的依赖性较弱。kmono的值涉及不带电的反应物和与kdimer相同的离子对过渡态;这些物种对酸强度的感觉不同,DPE对kmono的影响更大。H-BEA中的约束效应会影响kmono的值,因为反应物和过渡态中不同大小和数量的分子选择性地稳定了后者;然而,它们不影响二聚体,对于二聚体,相似大小的反应物和过渡态在相同程度上感受到空间约束。对于已知结构的固体酸,这种理论和实验的结合揭示了溶剂化、静电和范德华相互作用对稳定阳离子过渡态的相对贡献,并根据其相关中间体和过渡态的大小和电荷分布,对平行路线的相对贡献提供了预测性的见解。这些发现还表明,酸强度对测量的周转率的影响取决于反应条件及其伴随的测量速率参数的化学意义的变化。此外,实验和理论在解决机制争议方面的互补使用,为速率和平衡常数(通常不可分割地结合为测量速率参数)如何单独依赖于基于反应物、产物和相关基本步骤中涉及的过渡态中电荷的大小和空间分布的酸强度提供了预测性指导。本文为CH3OH脱水而建立的kmono, kdimer和DPE之间的独特关系可以在实践中应用于评估任何固体酸的酸强度,许多
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Title and Copyright
The effects of acid identity on CH3OH dehydration are examined here using density functional theory (DFT) estimates of acid strength (as deprotonation energies, DPE) and reaction energies, combined with rate data on Keggin polyoxometalate (POM) clusters and zeolite H-BEA. Measured first-order (kmono) and zero-order (kdimer) CH3OH dehydration rate constants depend exponentially on DPE for POM clusters; the value of kmono depends more strongly on DPE than kdimer does. The chemical significance of these rate parameters and the basis for their dependences on acid strength were established by using DFT to estimate the energies of intermediates and transition states involved in elementary steps that are consistent with measured rate equations. We conclude from this treatment that CH3OH dehydration proceeds via direct reactions of co-adsorbed CH3OH molecules for relevant solid acids and reaction conditions. Methyl cations formed at ionpair transition states in these direct routes are solvated by H2O and CH3OH more effectively than those in alternate sequential routes involving methoxide formation and subsequent reaction with CH3OH. The stability of ion-pairs, prevalent as intermediates and transition states on solid acids, depend sensitively on DPE because of concomitant correlations between the stability of the conjugate anionic cluster and DPE. The chemical interpretation of kmono and kdimer from mechanism-based rate equations, together with thermochemical cycles of their respective transition state formations, show that similar charge distributions in the intermediate and transition state involved in kdimer cause its weaker dependence on DPE. Values of kmono involve uncharged reactants and the same ion-pair transition state as kdimer; these species sense acid strength differently and cause the larger effects of DPE on kmono. Confinement effects in H-BEA affect the value of kmono because the different sizes and number of molecules in reactants and transition states selectively stabilize the latter; however, they do not influence kdimer, for which reactants and transition states of similar size sense spatial constraints to the same extent. This combination of theory and experiment for solid acids of known structure sheds considerable light on the relative contributions from solvation, electrostatic, and van der Waals interactions in stabilizing cationic transition states and provides predictive insights into the relative contributions of parallel routes based on the size and charge distributions of their relevant intermediates and transition states. These findings also demonstrate how the consequences of acid strength on measured turnover rates depend on reaction conditions and their concomitant changes in the chemical significance of the rate parameters measured. Moreover, the complementary use of experiment and theory in resolving mechanistic controversies has given predictive guidance about how rate and equilibrium constants, often inextricably combined as measured rate parameters, individually depend on acid strength based on the magnitude and spatial distributions of charges in reactants, products, and transition states involved in relevant elementary steps. The unique relations between kmono, kdimer, and DPE developed here for CH3OH dehydration can be applied in practice to assess the acid strength of any solid acid, many
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