Extending NMR Tortuosity Measurements to Paramagnetic Catalyst Materials Through the Use of Low Field NMR

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Abstract

Pulsed Field Gradient (PFG) NMR is recognised as an analytical technique used to characterise the tortuosity of porous media by measurement of the self-diffusion coefficient of a fluid contained within the pore space of the material of interest. Such measurements are usually performed on high magnetic field NMR hardware (>300 MHz). However, many materials of interest, in particular heterogeneous catalysts, contain significant amounts of paramagnetic species, which make such measurements impossible due to their characteristic short spin-spin relaxation times. Here it is demonstrated that by performing PFG NMR measurements on a low field magnet (2 MHz), tortuosity measurements can be obtained for a range of titania (TiO2) based carriers and catalyst precursors containing paramagnetic species up to a 20 wt.% loading. The approach is also used to compare the tortuosity of two catalyst precursors of the same metal loading prepared by different methods.

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Ward-Williams, J. A., Karsten, V., Guédon, C. M., Baart, T. A., Munnik, P., Sederman, A. J., … Gladden, L. F. (2022). Extending NMR Tortuosity Measurements to Paramagnetic Catalyst Materials Through the Use of Low Field NMR. Chemistry-Methods, 2(8). https://doi.org/10.1002/cmtd.202200025

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