Abstract
Zeolites are crystalline, microporous silicates widely used in catalysis and separations, yet the molecular mechanisms of their formation remain unresolved. Experiments indicate that hydrothermal synthesis of silica zeolites from clear solution proceeds through amorphous nanoaggregates that gradually develop zeolite order, in an apparently continuous amorphous to crystal transformation. Here, we combine molecular simulations with advanced algorithms that identify zeolite order and computer vision to elucidate the pathway from clear solution to zeolite nanocrystal. We show that at conditions of hydrothermal synthesis of silica zeolites, the transformation of precursor aggregate into zeolite is not limited by nucleation barriers but by the slow dynamics of reorganization in the glassy precursor matrix. The negligible nucleation barriers result in spinodal-like crystallization that leads to a gradual formation of a mosaic of small crystallites that explain the seemingly continuous character of zeolite crystallization and the catalytic activity of X-ray amorphous, protozeolites and embryonic zeolites. We find that zeolite-like pores and short-range order emerge early within glassy precursors, well before crystallinity is detected in TEM images or X-ray diffraction. The nanoaggregate’s temperature-size phase diagram reveals a convergence of the zeolite-amorphous equilibrium and maximum crystallization rate at ~3 nm diameter nanoparticle diameters and ~200 °C. This convergence signals the termination of the first-order amorphous-to-zeolite transition. Our results provide a unifying framework for understanding nucleation of silica zeolites from solution and suggest that barrierless nucleation may govern the formation of other nanoparticle systems, including minerals and oxides synthesized far below their bulk melting points.
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