Origins of the Hydrothermal Stability of Cu-Chabazite Zeolites for the Selective Catalytic Reduction of NO x
Journal article, 2025

Cu-exchanged chabazite zeolites are used industrially as catalysts for abatement of NO x pollution from diesel engines; however, catalyst activity is adversely impacted by exposure to high temperature steam. This occurs due to both dealumination of the zeolite framework and aggregation of Cu2+ cations into larger oxide agglomerates that are less active. Under oxidation-limited conditions in the presence of coadsorbed NH3, hydrothermal aging of Cu-chabazite leads to a surprising increase in the rate of NO x reduction per redox-active Cu cation at low temperatures (200 degrees C). A combination of electron microscopy, electron diffraction, NMR spectroscopy, and reaction kinetics analyses reveals that, although a portion of Cu species sinter into large agglomerates during aging, activity is maintained by the remaining Cu2+ cations that are stabilized by pairs of framework aluminum sites. These sites exhibit lower activation enthalpies for ammonia exchange dynamics, manifesting enhanced mobility of Cu2+ ions that persist as the extent of aging increases. The results yield insights into the complicated physicochemical processes and ramifications associated with deactivation of technologically important Cu-CHA zeolite catalysts, including the dynamics of adsorbed intermediates and the macroscopic reaction properties of the selective catalytic reduction of NO x over active Cu species.

Author

Michael B. Schmithorst

University of California

Evgeniia Ikonnikova

Stockholm University

Bryan Lee Cruz Delgado

Purdue University

Alyssa Mcnarney

University of California

Alan Stoev

University of California

Lunjie Zeng

Chalmers, Physics, Nano and Biophysics

Vivek Vattipalli

BASF

Takayuki Iida

BASF

Tom Willhammar

Stockholm University

Xiaodong Zou

Stockholm University

Rajamani Gounder

Purdue University

Eva Olsson

Chalmers, Physics, Nano and Biophysics

Ahmad Moini

BASF

Subramanian Prasad

BASF

Bradley F. Chmelka

University of California

Journal of the American Chemical Society

0002-7863 (ISSN) 1520-5126 (eISSN)

Vol. 147 50 46152-46162

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Materials Chemistry

Inorganic Chemistry

Physical Chemistry

DOI

10.1021/jacs.5c14587

PubMed

41346281

More information

Latest update

1/7/2026 1