Zeolite chemistry and catalysis are expected to play
a decisive
role in the next decade(s) to build a more decentralized renewable
feedstock-dependent sustainable society owing to the increased scrutiny
over carbon emissions. Therefore, the lack of fundamental and mechanistic
understanding of these processes is a critical “technical bottleneck”
that must be eliminated to maximize economic value and minimize waste.
We have identified, considering this objective, that the chemistry
related to the first-generation reaction intermediates (i.e., carbocations,
radicals, carbenes, ketenes, and carbanions) in zeolite chemistry
and catalysis is highly underdeveloped or undervalued compared to
other catalysis streams (e.g., homogeneous catalysis). This limitation
can often be attributed to the technological restrictions to detect
such “short-lived and highly reactive” intermediates
at the interface (gas–solid/solid–liquid); however,
the recent rise of sophisticated spectroscopic/analytical techniques
(including under in situ/operando conditions) and modern data analysis
methods collectively compete to unravel the impact of these organic
intermediates. This comprehensive review summarizes the state-of-the-art
first-generation organic reaction intermediates in zeolite chemistry
and catalysis and evaluates their existing challenges and future prospects,
to contribute significantly to the “circular carbon economy”
initiatives.