Issue 13, 2000

Genesis of V4+ in heteropoly compounds CsxH4−xPVMo11O40 during thermal treatment, rehydration and oxidation of methanol studied by EPR spectroscopy

Abstract

The development and structural changes of V4+ and Mo5+ centers in caesium salts and the acid form of molybdovanadophosphorus heteropoly compounds CsxH4−xPVMo11O40 ·nH2O (x=0, 3, 4) of Keggin structure were investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) after preparation, thermal treatment in oxygen, reduction by methanol and catalytic oxidation of methanol. The various types of paramagnetic centers are found to characterize the different states and structural transitions of the heteropoly anion. In addition, the EPR spectra reflect well the different reducibility, thermal stability and mobility of vanadium and Keggin (“ lattice”) oxygen of the Cs4, the Cs3H and the H4 compounds. The V4+ centers in the Cs4 salt are different in structure, lower in concentration and thermally more stable than those in the acid form. The reduction of vanadium during thermal treatment due to the loss and oxidation of coordinated (“ lattice”) oxygen to O2 is observed in the acid and the Cs3H salt only, but not in the Cs4 compound. As deduced from quantitative EPR measurements and manganometric redox titrations, between 0.5 and 8% of the vanadium is present as V4+ after preparation and thermal treatment in oxygen, whereas the majority of vanadium is reduced by reaction with methanol. V4+ substitutes Mo atoms in the Keggin unit in the fully exchanged Cs salt (Cs4). The presence of the bulky caesium counter-cations prevents the removal of vanadium from the Keggin unit to the secondary structure and thus the formation of vanadyl bridged polymers.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Mar 2000
Accepted
10 May 2000
First published
05 Jun 2000

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2000,2, 2977-2983

Genesis of V4+ in heteropoly compounds CsxH4−xPVMo11O40 during thermal treatment, rehydration and oxidation of methanol studied by EPR spectroscopy

J. K. Lee, V. Russo, J. Melsheimer, K. Köhler and R. Schlögl, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2000, 2, 2977 DOI: 10.1039/B001800G

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