Issue 8, 2026, Issue in Progress

Tailoring hierarchical ZSM-5 with water-soluble polymers templates for BTX production in methanol-to-aromatics

Abstract

Hierarchical ZSM-5 zeolites were synthesized by one-pot methods utilizing water-soluble polymers—polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) and polyethylene glycol (PEG)—and were compared with a desilicated (DS/ZC) typical microporous ZSM-5 (ZC). Thorough evaluation utilizing XRD, FT-IR, NH3 physisorption, SEM and TEM, ICP-OES, NH3-TPD, and TGA demonstrated that PVP-templated ZSM-5 (PVP/ZC) displayed distinct mesoporosity while maintaining its inherent microporous structure, resulting in a balanced allocation of weak and strong acid sites. All catalysts were assessed in the methanol-to-aromatics (MTA) reaction at 400 °C, with a weight hourly space velocity (WHSV) of 5 h−1 and atmospheric pressure (time on stream = 3 h), resulting in over 99.5% methanol conversion. PVP/ZC attained the highest BTX selectivity of 51.3% and an overall aromatic selectivity of 60.1%, due to its uniform mesoporosity, reduced diffusion pathways along the b-axis, and optimized distribution of acid sites, which collectively minimized secondary C9+ formation (8.8%) and coke deposition (3.27 wt%). The findings indicate that water-soluble polymer templates, specifically PVP, facilitate the customized synthesis of hierarchical ZSM-5 catalysts, which improve BTX production and stability in the MTA process, providing a cost-effective and environmentally friendly alternative to conventional templating and post-synthetic treatments.

Graphical abstract: Tailoring hierarchical ZSM-5 with water-soluble polymers templates for BTX production in methanol-to-aromatics

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Nov 2025
Accepted
08 Jan 2026
First published
04 Feb 2026
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2026,16, 7040-7055

Tailoring hierarchical ZSM-5 with water-soluble polymers templates for BTX production in methanol-to-aromatics

A. Abbasi, K. Pourabdollah and B. Mokhtarani, RSC Adv., 2026, 16, 7040 DOI: 10.1039/D5RA08403B

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