Dealumination of Y zeolite through an economic and eco-friendly
defect-engineering strategy
Abstract
In this article, a sustainable defect-engineering strategy for
dealumination of Y zeolite is described. This strategy includes the
green synthesis of a well-crystallized Y zeolite with point defects
arising from the incorporation of Fe atoms by using a Fe-containing
perlite and the subsequent preparation of ultra-stable Y (USY) zeolite
by effective dealumination. The systematic characterizations verify that
Fe atoms originally existing in the perlite are incorporated into the
as-synthesized Y zeolite and function as point defects, leading to the
distortion of framework Al. The step-by-step investigation of the
dealumination process shows that vacancies are formed by the extraction
of framework Fe in the ammonium exchange, and the framework
dealumination is promoted under the combined effect of the distorted
framework Al and the formed vacancies during the steaming treatment. The
resulting USY zeolite owns excellent features in (hydro)thermal
stability, pore structure and acid property, and thus exhibits
outstanding catalytic cracking performance.