Dehydrogenation of methanol on Pd(100): comparison with the results of Pd(111)

被引:31
作者
Jiang, Ruibin [1 ]
Guo, Wenyue [1 ]
Li, Ming [1 ]
Lu, Xiaoqing [3 ]
Yuan, Jianye [1 ]
Shan, Honghong [2 ]
机构
[1] China Univ Petr, Coll Phys Sci & Technol, Dongying 257061, Shandong, Peoples R China
[2] China Univ Petr, Coll Chem & Chem Engn, Dongying 257061, Shandong, Peoples R China
[3] City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Phys & Mat Sci, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
关键词
DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY; TRANSITION-METAL SURFACES; SINGLE-CRYSTAL SURFACES; HYDROGEN-PRODUCTION; PARTIAL OXIDATION; NI(111) SURFACE; SUPPORTED PD; DECOMPOSITION; ADSORPTION; CATALYSTS;
D O I
10.1039/b927050g
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
Dehydrogenation of methanol on Pd(100) is systematically investigated using self-consistent periodic density functional theory. The theoretical results are compared with those of the same reaction on Pd(111) published very recently [J. Phys. Chem. C, 2009, 113, 4188-4197]. Switching from (111) to (100), adsorptions are strengthened for most species except for CHO, CO and H at hollow sites. Moreover, Pd(100) affords relatively low energy barriers and higher rate constants for most elementary dehydrogenation steps as well as smaller desorption rates for the saturated adsorbates (methanol and formaldehyde), suggesting that the more open Pd surface indeed possesses the higher activity and selectivity for the complete dehydrogenation of methanol. At lower temperatures (e. g., 250 K), Pd(100) affords the same dehydrogenation path as Pd(111) for methanol, which is unchanged on the latter surface at both lower and higher temperatures; whereas at the typical steam re-forming (MSR) temperature (500 K), the path on Pd(100), i.e., CH3OH -> CH3O and/or CH2OH -> CH2O -> CHO -> CO, is different from the situation of Pd(111). In both cases, the initial bond scission process constitutes the rate-determining step.
引用
收藏
页码:7794 / 7803
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Adsorption Mechanism of Acetylene Hydrogenation on the Pd (111) Surface
    Xie, Xuejia
    Song, Xiuli
    Dong, Wenyan
    Liang, Zhenhai
    Fan, Caimei
    Han, Peide
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, 2014, 32 (07) : 631 - 636
  • [42] Hydrogen adsorption in the presence of coadsorbed CO on Pd(111)
    Fonseca, S.
    Maia, G.
    Pinto, L. M. C.
    ELECTROCHEMISTRY COMMUNICATIONS, 2018, 93 : 100 - 103
  • [43] A DFT Study of Methanol Synthesis from CO2 Hydrogenation on the Pd(111) Surface
    Zhang, Minhua
    Wu, Yufei
    Dou, Maobin
    Yu, Yingzhe
    CATALYSIS LETTERS, 2018, 148 (09) : 2935 - 2944
  • [44] Single Pd atom and Pd dimer embedded graphene catalyzed formic acid dehydrogenation: A first-principles study
    Luo, Qiquan
    Zhang, Wenhua
    Fu, Cen-Feng
    Yang, Jinlong
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYDROGEN ENERGY, 2018, 43 (14) : 6997 - 7006
  • [45] Comparison of the coupling of ethylene with acetate species and ethylene dehydrogenation on Pd-Au(100): a density functional study
    Huang, Yanping
    Dong, Xiuqin
    Hao, Qiufeng
    Yu, Yingzhe
    Zhang, Minhua
    CATALYSIS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2016, 6 (02) : 555 - 568
  • [46] CO Oxidation on the Pd(111) Surface
    Duan, Zhiyao
    Henkelman, Graeme
    ACS CATALYSIS, 2014, 4 (10): : 3435 - 3443
  • [47] The structure and bonding of furan on Pd(111)
    Bradley, M. K.
    Robinson, J.
    Woodruff, D. P.
    SURFACE SCIENCE, 2010, 604 (11-12) : 920 - 925
  • [48] Atomic and molecular adsorption on Pd(111)
    Herron, Jeffrey A.
    Tonelli, Scott
    Mavrikakis, Manos
    SURFACE SCIENCE, 2012, 606 (21-22) : 1670 - 1679
  • [49] Surface X-ray Scattering of Pd(111) and Pd(100) Electrodes during the Oxygen Reduction Reaction
    Naito, Keita
    Nakamura, Masashi
    Sakata, Osami
    Hoshi, Nagahiro
    ELECTROCHEMISTRY, 2011, 79 (04) : 256 - 260
  • [50] The Adsorption of Ethene on Pd(111) and Ordered Sn/Pd(111) Surface Alloys
    Hamm, G.
    Schmidt, T.
    Breitbach, J.
    Franke, D.
    Becker, C.
    Wandelt, K.
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR PHYSIKALISCHE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY & CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2009, 223 (1-2): : 209 - 232