Hydrophobic voids
within titanium silicates have long been considered
necessary to achieve high rates and selectivities for alkene epoxidations
with H2O2. The catalytic consequences of silanol
groups and their stabilization of hydrogen-bonded networks of water
(H2O), however, have not been demonstrated in ways that
lead to a clear understanding of their importance. We compare turnover
rates for 1-octene epoxidation and H2O2 decomposition
over a series of Ti-substituted zeolite *BEA (Ti-BEA) that encompasses
a wide range of densities of silanol nests ((SiOH)4). The
most hydrophilic Ti-BEA gives epoxidation turnover rates that are
100 times larger than those in defect-free Ti-BEA, yet rates of H2O2 decomposition are similar for all (SiOH)4 densities. These differences cause the most hydrophilic Ti-BEA
to also give the highest selectivities, which defies conventional
wisdom. Spectroscopic, thermodynamic, and kinetic evidence indicate
that these catalytic differences are not due to changes in the electronic
affinity of the active site, the electronic structure of Ti–OOH
intermediates, or the mechanism for epoxidation. Comparisons of apparent
activation enthalpies and entropies show that differences in epoxidation
rates and selectivities reflect favorable entropy gains produced when
epoxidation transition states disrupt hydrogen-bonded H2O clusters anchored to (SiOH)4 near active sites. Transition
states for H2O2 decomposition hydrogen bond
with H2O in ways similar to Ti–OOH reactive species,
such that decomposition becomes insensitive to the presence of (SiOH)4. Collectively, these findings clarify how molecular interactions
between reactive species, hydrogen-bonded solvent networks, and polar
surfaces can influence rates and selectivities for epoxidation (and
other reactions) in zeolite catalysts.
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