Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 10 de 10
Filtrar
Mais filtros

Base de dados
Tipo de documento
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(48): 17608-17616, 2017 12 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29131603

RESUMO

Ceria (CeO2) has recently been found to be a promising catalyst in the selective hydrogenation of alkynes to alkenes. This reaction occurs primarily on highly dispersed metal catalysts, but rarely on oxide surfaces. The origin of the outstanding activity and selectivity observed on CeO2 remains unclear. In this work, we show that one key aspect of the hydrogenation reaction-the interaction of hydrogen with the oxide-depends strongly on the presence of O vacancies within CeO2. Through infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy on well-ordered CeO2(111) thin films and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we show that the preferred heterolytic dissociation of molecular hydrogen on CeO2(111) requires H2 pressures in the mbar regime. Hydrogen depth profiling with nuclear reaction analysis indicates that H species stay on the surface of stoichiometric CeO2(111) films, whereas H incorporates as a volatile species into the volume of partially reduced CeO2-x(111) thin films (x ∼ 1.8-1.9). Complementary DFT calculations demonstrate that oxygen vacancies facilitate H incorporation below the surface and that they are the key to the stabilization of hydridic H species in the volume of reduced ceria.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 115(3): 036804, 2015 Jul 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26230817

RESUMO

STM conductance spectroscopy and mapping has been used to analyze the impact of molecular adsorption on the quantized electronic structure of individual metal nanoparticles. For this purpose, isophorone and CO2, as prototype molecules for physisorptive and chemisorptive binding, were dosed onto monolayer Au islands grown on MgO thin films. The molecules attach exclusively to the metal-oxide boundary, while the interior of the islands remains pristine. The Au quantum well states are perturbed due to the adsorption process and increase their mutual energy spacing in the CO2 case but move together in isophorone-covered islands. The shifts disclose the nature of the molecule-Au interaction, which relies on electron exchange for the CO2 ligands but on dispersive forces for the organic species. Our experiments reveal how molecular adsorption affects individual quantum systems, a topic of utmost relevance for heterogeneous catalysis.

3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 54(42): 12484-7, 2015 Oct 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26012347

RESUMO

A model system has been created to shuttle electrons through a metal-insulator-metal (MIM) structure to induce the formation of a CO2 anion radical from adsorbed gas-phase carbon dioxide that subsequently reacts to form an oxalate species. The process is completely reversible, and thus allows the elementary steps involved to be studied at the atomic level. The oxalate species at the MIM interface have been identified locally by scanning tunneling microscopy, chemically by IR spectroscopy, and their formation verified by density functional calculations.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 134(43): 18034-45, 2012 Oct 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23020248

RESUMO

The temperature-dependent adsorption and reaction of acetaldehyde (CH(3)CHO) on a fully oxidized and a highly reduced thin-film CeO(2)(111) surface have been investigated using a combination of reflection-absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS) and periodic density functional theory (DFT+U) calculations. On the fully oxidized surface, acetaldehyde adsorbs weakly through its carbonyl O interacting with a lattice Ce(4+) cation in the η(1)-O configuration. This state desorbs at 210 K without reaction. On the highly reduced surface, new vibrational signatures appear below 220 K. They are identified by RAIRS and DFT as a dimer state formed from the coupling of the carbonyl O and the acyl C of two acetaldehyde molecules. This dimer state remains up to 400 K before decomposing to produce another distinct set of vibrational signatures, which are identified as the enolate form of acetaldehyde (CH(2)CHO¯). Furthermore, the calculated activation barriers for the coupling of acetaldehyde, the decomposition of the dimer state, and the recombinative desorption of enolate and H as acetaldehyde are in good agreement with previously reported TPD results for acetaldehyde adsorbed on reduced CeO(2)(111) [Chen et al. J. Phys. Chem. C 2011, 115, 3385]. The present findings demonstrate that surface oxygen vacancies alter the reactivity of the CeO(2)(111) surface and play a crucial role in stabilizing and activating acetaldehyde for coupling reactions.


Assuntos
Acetaldeído/química , Cério/química , Oxigênio/química , Adsorção , Tamanho da Partícula , Teoria Quântica , Espectrofotometria Infravermelho , Propriedades de Superfície , Temperatura
5.
ACS Catal ; 11(14): 8621-8634, 2021 Jul 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34306815

RESUMO

Using in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we conclusively demonstrate that acetaldehyde (AcH) undergoes aldol condensation when flown over ceria octahedral nanoparticles, and the reaction is desorption-limited at ambient temperature. trans-Crotonaldehyde (CrH) is the predominant product whose coverage builds up on the catalyst with time on stream. The proposed mechanism on CeO2(111) proceeds via AcH enolization (i.e., α C-H bond scission), C-C coupling, and further enolization and dehydroxylation of the aldol adduct, 3-hydroxybutanal, to yield trans-CrH. The mechanism with its DFT-calculated parameters is consistent with reactivity at ambient temperature and with the kinetic behavior of the aldol condensation of AcH reported on other oxides. The slightly less stable cis-CrH can be produced by the same mechanism depending on how the enolate and AcH are positioned with respect to each other in C-C coupling. All vibrational modes in DRIFTS are identified with AcH or trans-CrH, except for a feature at 1620 cm-1 that is more intense relative to the other bands on the partially reduced ceria sample than on the oxidized sample. It is identified to be the C=C stretch mode of CH3CHOHCHCHO adsorbed on an oxygen vacancy. It constitutes a deep energy minimum, rendering oxygen vacancies an inactive site for CrH formation under given conditions.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 132(7): 2202-7, 2010 Feb 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20121234

RESUMO

The high adsorbate coverages that form on the surfaces of many heterogeneous catalysts under steady-state conditions can significantly lower the activation energies for reactions that involve the coupling of two adsorbed intermediates while increasing those which result in adsorbate bond-breaking reactions. The influence of the surface coverage on the kinetics of metal-catalyzed reactions is often ignored in theoretical and even in some ultrahigh vacuum experimental studies. Herein, first principle density functional theoretical calculations are combined with experimental surface titration studies carried out over well-defined Pd(111) surfaces to explicitly examine the influence of coverage on the acetoxylation of ethylene to form vinyl acetate over Pd. The activation energies calculated for elementary steps in the Samanos and Moiseev pathways for vinyl acetate synthesis carried out on acetate-saturated palladium surfaces reveal that the reaction proceeds via the Samanos mechanism which is consistent with experimental results carried out on acetate-saturated Pd(111) surfaces. The rate-limiting step involves a beta-hydride elimination from the adsorbed acetoxyethyl intermediate, which proceeds with an apparent calculated activation barrier of 53 kJ/mol which is in very good agreement with the experimental barrier of 55 +/- 4 kJ/mol determined from kinetic measurements.

7.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 12(37): 11624-9, 2010 Oct 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20714484

RESUMO

One-dimensional supramolecular structures formed by adsorbing low coverages of 1,4-diisocyanobenzene on Au(111) at room temperature are obtained and imaged by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) under ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions. The structures originate from step edges or surface defects and arrange predominantly in a straight fashion on the substrate terraces along the <110> directions. They are proposed to consist of alternating units of 1,4-diisocyanobenzene molecules and gold atoms with a unit cell in registry with the substrate corresponding to four times the lattice interatomic distance. Their long 1-D chains and high thermal stability offer the potential to use them as conductors in nanoelectronic applications.


Assuntos
Derivados de Benzeno/química , Ouro/química , Nitrilas/química , Adsorção , Microscopia de Tunelamento/métodos , Propriedades de Superfície
8.
ACS Nano ; 9(12): 12124-36, 2015 Dec 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26548479

RESUMO

Effective CO2 capture and reduction can be achieved through a molecular scale understanding of interaction of CO2 molecules with chemically active sites and the cooperative effects they induce in functional materials. Self-assembled arrays of parallel chains composed of Au adatoms connected by 1,4-phenylene diisocyanide (PDI) linkers decorating Au surfaces exhibit self-catalyzed CO2 capture leading to large scale surface restructuring at 77 K (ACS Nano 2014, 8, 8644-8652). We explore the cooperative interactions among CO2 molecules, Au-PDI chains and Au substrates that are responsible for the self-catalyzed capture by low temperature scanning tunneling microscopy (LT-STM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (IRAS), temperature-programmed desorption (TPD), and dispersion corrected density functional theory (DFT). Decorating Au surfaces with Au-PDI chains gives the interfacial metal-organic polymer characteristics of both a homogeneous and heterogeneous catalyst. Au-PDI chains activate the normally inert Au surfaces by promoting CO2 chemisorption at the Au adatom sites even at <20 K. The CO2(δ-) species coordinating Au adatoms in-turn seed physisorption of CO2 molecules in highly ordered two-dimensional (2D) clusters, which grow with increasing dose to a full monolayer and, surprisingly, can be imaged with molecular resolution on Au crystal terraces. The dispersion interactions with the substrate force the monolayer to assume a rhombic structure similar to a high-pressure CO2 crystalline solid rather than the cubic dry ice phase. The Au surface supported Au-PDI chains provide a platform for investigating the physical and chemical interactions involved in CO2 capture and reduction.

10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 126(47): 15384-5, 2004 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15563157

RESUMO

The reaction pathway of vinyl acetate synthesis is scrutinized by reacting gas-phase ethylene (at an effective pressure of 1 x 10-4 Torr) with eta2-acetate species (with a coverage of 0.31 +/- 0.02 monolayer) on a Pd(111)-O(2x2) model catalyst surface in ultrahigh vacuum. It is found that the 1414 cm-1 infrared feature due to the symmetric OCO stretching mode of the acetate species decreases in intensity due to reaction with gas-phase ethylene, while temperature-programmed desorption experiments demonstrate that vinyl acetate is formed. The formation of ethylidyne species is detected when almost all of the acetate species have been removed. The experimental removal kinetics are reproduced by a model in which adsorbed acetates react with an ethylene-derived (possibly ethylene or vinyl) species, where ethylene adsorption is blocked by the acetate present on the surface.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA