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Dive into the research topics where Aleksei Vjunov is active.

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Featured researches published by Aleksei Vjunov.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Sintering-resistant Single-Site Nickel Catalyst Supported by Metal-Organic Framework

Zhanyong Li; Neil M. Schweitzer; Aaron B. League; Varinia Bernales; Aaron W. Peters; Andrew “Bean” Getsoian; Timothy C. Wang; Jeffrey T. Miller; Aleksei Vjunov; John L. Fulton; Johannes A. Lercher; Christopher J. Cramer; Laura Gagliardi; Joseph T. Hupp; Omar K. Farha

Developing supported single-site catalysts is an important goal in heterogeneous catalysis since the well-defined active sites afford opportunities for detailed mechanistic studies, thereby facilitating the design of improved catalysts. We present herein a method for installing Ni ions uniformly and precisely on the node of a Zr-based metal-organic framework (MOF), NU-1000, in high density and large quantity (denoted as Ni-AIM) using atomic layer deposition (ALD) in a MOF (AIM). Ni-AIM is demonstrated to be an efficient gas-phase hydrogenation catalyst upon activation. The structure of the active sites in Ni-AIM is proposed, revealing its single-site nature. More importantly, due to the organic linker used to construct the MOF support, the Ni ions stay isolated throughout the hydrogenation catalysis, in accord with its long-term stability. A quantum chemical characterization of the catalyst and the catalytic process complements the experimental results. With validation of computational modeling protocols, we further targeted ethylene oligomerization catalysis by Ni-AIM guided by theoretical prediction. Given the generality of the AIM methodology, this emerging class of materials should prove ripe for the discovery of new catalysts for the transformation of volatile substrates.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Quantitatively Probing the Al Distribution in Zeolites

Aleksei Vjunov; John L. Fulton; Thomas Huthwelker; Sonia Pin; Donghai Mei; Gregory K. Schenter; Niranjan Govind; Donald M. Camaioni; Jian Zhi Hu; Johannes A. Lercher

The degree of substitution of Si(4+) by Al(3+) in the oxygen-terminated tetrahedra (Al T-sites) of zeolites determines the concentration of ion-exchange and Brønsted acid sites. Because the location of the tetrahedra and the associated subtle variations in bond angles influence the acid strength, quantitative information about Al T-sites in the framework is critical to rationalize catalytic properties and to design new catalysts. A quantitative analysis is reported that uses a combination of extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) analysis and (27)Al MAS NMR spectroscopy supported by DFT-based molecular dynamics simulations. To discriminate individual Al atoms, sets of ab initio EXAFS spectra for various T-sites are generated from DFT-based molecular dynamics simulations, allowing quantitative treatment of the EXAFS single- and multiple-photoelectron scattering processes out to 3-4 atom shells surrounding the Al absorption center. It is observed that identical zeolite types show dramatically different Al distributions. A preference of Al for T-sites that are part of one or more 4-member rings in the framework over those T-sites that are part of only 5- and 6-member rings in an HBEA150 zeolite has been determined using this analysis.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Following Solid-Acid-Catalyzed Reactions by MAS NMR Spectroscopy in Liquid Phase—Zeolite-Catalyzed Conversion of Cyclohexanol in Water†

Aleksei Vjunov; Mary Y. Hu; Ju Feng; Donald M. Camaioni; Donghai Mei; Jian Z. Hu; Chen Zhao; Johannes A. Lercher

A microautoclave magic angle spinning NMR rotor is developed enabling in situ monitoring of solid-liquid-gas reactions at high temperatures and pressures. It is used in a kinetic and mechanistic study of the reactions of cyclohexanol on zeolite HBEA in 130 °C water. The (13) C spectra show that dehydration of 1-(13) C-cyclohexanol occurs with significant migration of the hydroxy group in cyclohexanol and the double bond in cyclohexene with respect to the (13) C label. A simplified kinetic model shows the E1-type elimination fully accounts for the initial rates of 1-(13) C-cyclohexanol disappearance and the appearance of the differently labeled products, thus suggesting that the cyclohexyl cation undergoes a 1,2-hydride shift competitive with rehydration and deprotonation. Concurrent with the dehydration, trace amounts of dicyclohexyl ether are observed, and in approaching equilibrium, a secondary product, cyclohexyl-1-cyclohexene is formed. Compared to phosphoric acid, HBEA is shown to be a more active catalyst exhibiting a dehydration rate that is 100-fold faster per proton.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Impact of the Oxygen Defects and the Hydrogen Concentration on the Surface of Tetragonal and Monoclinic ZrO2 on the Reduction Rates of Stearic Acid on Ni/ZrO2

Sebastian Foraita; John L. Fulton; Zizwe A. Chase; Aleksei Vjunov; Pinghong Xu; Eszter Baráth; Donald M. Camaioni; Chen Zhao; Johannes A. Lercher

The role of the specific physicochemical properties of ZrO2 phases on Ni/ZrO2 has been explored with respect to the reduction of stearic acid. Conversion on pure m-ZrO2 is 1.3 times more active than on t-ZrO2 , whereas Ni/m-ZrO2 is three times more active than Ni/t-ZrO2 . Although the hydrodeoxygenation of stearic acid can be catalyzed solely by Ni, the synergistic interaction between Ni and the ZrO2 support causes the variations in the reaction rates. Adsorption of the carboxylic acid group on an oxygen vacancy of ZrO2 and the abstraction of the α-hydrogen atom with the elimination of the oxygen atom to produce a ketene is the key to enhance the overall rate. The hydrogenated intermediate 1-octadecanol is in turn decarbonylated to heptadecane with identical rates on all catalysts. Decarbonylation of 1-octadecanol is concluded to be limited by the competitive adsorption of reactants and intermediate. The substantially higher adsorption of propionic acid demonstrated by IR spectroscopy and the higher reactivity to O2 exchange reactions with the more active catalyst indicate that the higher concentration of active oxygen defects on m-ZrO2 compared to t-ZrO2 causes the higher activity of Ni/m-ZrO2 .


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Methane Oxidation to Methanol Catalyzed by Cu-Oxo Clusters Stabilized in NU-1000 Metal–Organic Framework

Takaaki Ikuno; Jian Zheng; Aleksei Vjunov; Maricruz Sanchez-Sanchez; Manuel A. Ortuño; Dale R. Pahls; John L. Fulton; Donald M. Camaioni; Zhanyong Li; Debmalya Ray; B. Layla Mehdi; Nigel D. Browning; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; Christopher J. Cramer; Laura Gagliardi; Johannes A. Lercher

Copper oxide clusters synthesized via atomic layer deposition on the nodes of the metal-organic framework (MOF) NU-1000 are active for oxidation of methane to methanol under mild reaction conditions. Analysis of chemical reactivity, in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and density functional theory calculations are used to determine structure/activity relations in the Cu-NU-1000 catalytic system. The Cu-loaded MOF contained Cu-oxo clusters of a few Cu atoms. The Cu was present under ambient conditions as a mixture of ∼15% Cu+ and ∼85% Cu2+. The oxidation of methane on Cu-NU-1000 was accompanied by the reduction of 9% of the Cu in the catalyst from Cu2+ to Cu+. The products, methanol, dimethyl ether, and CO2, were desorbed with the passage of 10% water/He at 135 °C, giving a carbon selectivity for methane to methanol of 45-60%. Cu oxo clusters stabilized in NU-1000 provide an active, first generation MOF-based, selective methane oxidation catalyst.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Impact of Zeolite Aging in Hot Liquid Water on Activity for Acid-Catalyzed Dehydration of Alcohols

Aleksei Vjunov; Miroslaw A. Derewinski; John L. Fulton; Donald M. Camaioni; Johannes A. Lercher

The location and stability of Brønsted acid sites catalytically active in zeolites during aqueous phase dehydration of alcohols were studied on the example of cyclohexanol. The catalytically active hydronium ions originate from Brønsted acid sites (BAS) of the zeolite that are formed by framework tetrahedral Si atom substitution by Al. Al K-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) and (27)Al magic angle spinning (MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopies in combination with density functional theory (DFT) calculations are used to determine the distribution of tetrahedral Al sites (Al T-sites) both qualitatively and quantitatively for both parent and HBEA catalysts aged in water prior to catalytic testing. The aging procedure leads to partial degradation of the zeolite framework evidenced from the decrease of material crystallinity (XRD) as well as sorption capacity (BET). With the exception of one commercial zeolite sample, which had the highest concentration of framework silanol-defects, there is no evidence of Al coordination modification after aging in water. The catalyst weight-normalized dehydration rate correlated best with the sum of strong and weak Brønsted acidic protons both able to generate the hydrated hydronium ions. All hydronium ions were equally active for the acid-catalyzed reactions in water. Zeolite aging in hot water prior to catalysis decreased the weight normalized dehydration reaction rate compared to that of the parent HBEA, which is attributed to the reduced concentration of accessible Brønsted acid sites. Sites are hypothesized to be blocked due to reprecipitation of silica dissolved during framework hydrolysis in the aging procedure.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Improving Stability of Zeolites in Aqueous Phase via Selective Removal of Structural Defects.

Sebastian Prodinger; Miroslaw A. Derewinski; Aleksei Vjunov; Sarah D. Burton; Ilke Arslan; Johannes A. Lercher

Missing silicon-oxygen bonds in zeolites are shown to be the cause for structural instability of zeolites in hot liquid water. Their selective removal drastically improved their structural stability as demonstrated using zeolite beta as example. The defects in the siloxy bonds were capped by reaction with trimethylchlorosilane, and Si-O-Si bonds were eventually formed. Hydrolysis of Si-O-Si bonds of the parent materials and dissolution of silica-oxygen tetrahedra in water causing a decrease in sorption capacity by reprecipitation of dissolved silica and pore blocking was largely mitigated by the treatment. The stability of the modified molecular sieves was monitored by (29)Si-MAS NMR, transmission electron micrographs, X-ray diffraction, and adsorption isotherms. The microporosity, sorption capacity, and long-range order of the stabilized material were fully retained even after prolonged exposure to hot liquid water.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Bridging Zirconia Nodes within a Metal–Organic Framework via Catalytic Ni-Hydroxo Clusters to Form Heterobimetallic Nanowires

Ana E. Platero-Prats; Aaron B. League; Varinia Bernales; Jingyun Ye; Leighanne C. Gallington; Aleksei Vjunov; Neil M. Schweitzer; Zhanyong Li; Jian Zheng; B. Layla Mehdi; Andrew Stevens; Alice Dohnalkova; Mahalingam Balasubramanian; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; Nigel D. Browning; John L. Fulton; Donald M. Camaioni; Johannes A. Lercher; Donald G. Truhlar; Laura Gagliardi; Christopher J. Cramer; Karena W. Chapman

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), with their well-ordered pore networks and tunable surface chemistries, offer a versatile platform for preparing well-defined nanostructures wherein functionality such as catalysis can be incorporated. Notably, atomic layer deposition (ALD) in MOFs has recently emerged as a versatile approach to functionalize MOF surfaces with a wide variety of catalytic metal-oxo species. Understanding the structure of newly deposited species and how they are tethered within the MOF is critical to understanding how these components couple to govern the active material properties. By combining local and long-range structure probes, including X-ray absorption spectroscopy, pair distribution function analysis, and difference envelope density analysis, with electron microscopy imaging and computational modeling, we resolve the precise atomic structure of metal-oxo species deposited in the MOF NU-1000 through ALD. These analyses demonstrate that deposition of NiOxHy clusters occurs selectively within the smallest pores of NU-1000, between the zirconia nodes, serving to connect these nodes along the c-direction to yield heterobimetallic metal-oxo nanowires. This bridging motif perturbs the NU-1000 framework structure, drawing the zirconia nodes closer together, and also underlies the sintering resistance of these clusters during the hydrogenation of light olefins.


Nature Communications | 2017

Enhancing the catalytic activity of hydronium ions through constrained environments

Yuanshuai Liu; Aleksei Vjunov; Hui Shi; Sebastian Eckstein; Donald M. Camaioni; Donghai Mei; Eszter Baráth; Johannes A. Lercher

The dehydration of alcohols is involved in many organic conversions but has to overcome high free-energy barriers in water. Here we demonstrate that hydronium ions confined in the nanopores of zeolite HBEA catalyse aqueous phase dehydration of cyclohexanol at a rate significantly higher than hydronium ions in water. This rate enhancement is not related to a shift in mechanism; for both cases, the dehydration of cyclohexanol occurs via an E1 mechanism with the cleavage of Cβ–H bond being rate determining. The higher activity of hydronium ions in zeolites is caused by the enhanced association between the hydronium ion and the alcohol, as well as a higher intrinsic rate constant in the constrained environments compared with water. The higher rate constant is caused by a greater entropy of activation rather than a lower enthalpy of activation. These insights should allow us to understand and predict similar processes in confined spaces.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

State of Supported Nickel Nanoparticles during Catalysis in Aqueous Media.

Zizwe A. Chase; Stanislav Kasakov; Hui Shi; Aleksei Vjunov; John L. Fulton; Donald M. Camaioni; Mahalingam Balasubramanian; Chen Zhao; Yong Wang; Johannes A. Lercher

The state of Ni supported on HZSM-5 zeolite, silica, and sulfonated carbon was studied during aqueous-phase catalysis of phenol hydrodeoxygenation using in situ extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy. On sulfonated carbon and HZSM-5 supports, NiO and Ni(OH)2 were readily reduced to Ni(0) under reaction conditions (≈35 bar H2 in aqueous phenol solutions containing up to 0.5 wt. % phosphoric acid at 473 K). In contrast, Ni supported on SiO2 was not stable in a fully reduced Ni(0) state. Water enables the formation of Ni(II) phyllosilicate, which is more stable, that is, difficult to reduce, than either α-Ni(OH)2 or NiO. Leaching of Ni from the supports was not observed over a broad range of reaction conditions. Ni(0) particles on HZSM-5 were stable even in presence of 15 wt. % acetic acid at 473 K and 35 bar H2 .

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Donald M. Camaioni

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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John L. Fulton

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Donghai Mei

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Hui Shi

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Jian Zhi Hu

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Niranjan Govind

Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory

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