A first-principles study of CO hydrogenation into methane on molybdenum carbides catalysts

被引:44
作者
Qi, Ke-Zhen [1 ,2 ]
Wang, Gui-Chang [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Zheng, Wen-Jun [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Nankai Univ, Dept Chem, Tianjin 300071, Peoples R China
[2] Nankai Univ, Tianjin Key Lab Met & Mol Based Mat Chem, Tianjin 300071, Peoples R China
[3] Shanxi Datong Univ, Coll Chem & Chem Engn, Datong 037009, Shanxi Province, Peoples R China
关键词
CO hydrogenation; Methane; Molybdenum carbide; Density functional calculations; DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY; TRANSITION-METAL CARBIDES; ALCOHOL SYNTHESIS; CARBON-MONOXIDE; BOND SCISSION; O-H; ADSORPTION; DISSOCIATION; SURFACES; SYNGAS;
D O I
10.1016/j.susc.2013.04.001
中图分类号
O64 [物理化学(理论化学)、化学物理学];
学科分类号
070304 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The reaction mechanisms for the CO hydrogenation to produce CH4 on both fcc-Mo2C (100) and hcp-MO2C (101) surfaces are investigated using density functional theory calculations with the periodic slab model. Through systematic calculations for the mechanisms of the CO hydrogenation on the two surfaces, we found that the reaction mechanisms are the same on both fcc and hcp MO2C catalysts, that is, CO -> HCO -> H2CO -> H2COH -> CH2 -> CH3 -> CH4. The activation energy of the rate-determining step (CH3 + H -> CH4) on fcc-Mo2C (100) (0.84 eV) is lower than that on hcp-MO2C (101) (1.20 eV), and that is why catalytic activity of fcc-Mo2C is higher than hcp-MO2C for CO hydrogenation. Our calculated results are consistent with the experimental observations. The activity difference of these two surfaces mainly comes from the co-adsorption energy difference between initial state (IS) and transition state (TS), that is, the co-adsorption energy difference between IS and TS is -0.04 eV on fcc MO2C (100), while it is as high as 0.68 eV on hcp MO2C (101), and thus leading to the lower activation barrier for the reaction of CH3 + H -> CH4 on fcc-Mo2C (100) compared to that of hcp-MO2C (101). (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:53 / 63
页数:11
相关论文
共 57 条
[21]   Water-gas-shift reaction on molybdenum carbide surfaces: Essential role of the oxycarbide [J].
Liu, Ping ;
Rodriguez, Jose A. .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2006, 110 (39) :19418-19425
[22]   General trends in CO dissociation on transition metal surfaces [J].
Liu, ZP ;
Hu, P .
JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2001, 114 (19) :8244-8247
[23]   Fast Prediction of Selectivity in Heterogeneous Catalysis from Extended Bronsted-Evans-Polanyi Relations: A Theoretical Insight [J].
Loffreda, David ;
Delbecq, Francoise ;
Vigne, Fabienne ;
Sautet, Philippe .
ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION, 2009, 48 (47) :8978-8980
[24]   The Bronsted-Evans-Polanyi relation and the volcano plot for ammonia synthesis over transition metal catalysts [J].
Logadottir, A ;
Rod, TH ;
Norskov, JK ;
Hammer, B ;
Dahl, S ;
Jacobsen, CJH .
JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS, 2001, 197 (02) :229-231
[25]   Elementary steps of syngas reactions on Mo2C(001): Adsorption thermochemistry and bond dissociation [J].
Medford, Andrew J. ;
Vojvodic, Aleksandra ;
Studt, Felix ;
Abild-Pedersen, Frank ;
Norskov, Jens K. .
JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS, 2012, 290 :108-117
[26]   Identification of general linear relationships between activation energies and enthalpy changes for dissociation reactions at surfaces [J].
Michaelides, A ;
Liu, ZP ;
Zhang, CJ ;
Alavi, A ;
King, DA ;
Hu, P .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2003, 125 (13) :3704-3705
[27]   Methyl chemisorption on Ni(111) and C-H-M multicentre bonding: a density functional theory study [J].
Michaelides, A ;
Hu, P .
SURFACE SCIENCE, 1999, 437 (03) :362-376
[28]   SPECIAL POINTS FOR BRILLOUIN-ZONE INTEGRATIONS [J].
CHADI, DJ .
PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 1977, 16 (04) :1746-1747
[29]   Nitrogen adsorption and dissociation on Fe(111) [J].
Mortensen, JJ ;
Hansen, LB ;
Hammer, B ;
Norskov, JK .
JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS, 1999, 182 (02) :479-488
[30]   Universality in heterogeneous catalysis [J].
Norskov, JK ;
Bligaard, T ;
Logadottir, A ;
Bahn, S ;
Hansen, LB ;
Bollinger, M ;
Bengaard, H ;
Hammer, B ;
Sljivancanin, Z ;
Mavrikakis, M ;
Xu, Y ;
Dahl, S ;
Jacobsen, CJH .
JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS, 2002, 209 (02) :275-278