First-principles microkinetic simulations revealing the scaling relations and structure sensitivity of CO2 hydrogenation to C1 & C2 oxygenates on Pd surfaces

被引:10
作者
Ke, Jun [1 ]
Wang, Yang-Dong [1 ]
Wang, Chuan-Ming [1 ]
机构
[1] Sinopec Shanghai Res Inst Petrochem Technol, State Key Lab Green Chem Engn & Ind Catalysis, Shanghai 201208, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
TOTAL-ENERGY CALCULATIONS; SYNTHESIS GAS CONVERSION; CARBON-DIOXIDE; CATALYTIC-HYDROGENATION; METHANOL SYNTHESIS; HIGHER ALCOHOLS; METAL-SURFACES; SUPPORTED PD; ACTIVE-SITES; ETHANOL;
D O I
10.1039/d1cy00700a
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
Hydrogenation of CO2 to methanol, ethanol and other oxygenates is an emerging attractive process in C-1 chemistry but remains a great challenge not least because of the intrinsic inertness of CO2, difficulty in C-C bond coupling, and complexity in product distribution. Identifying the dominant reaction mechanism is therefore urgent but still lacking under real reaction conditions. In this work, by combining density functional theory calculations with microkinetic modeling, we predicted the activity plots of C-1 & C-2 oxygenates as a function of temperature and pressure on both stepped Pd(211) and flat Pd(111) surfaces according to the reaction network consisting of similar to 150 elementary steps. We found that Pd(211) is more active than Pd(111), and the incremental effect is more remarkable for the production of C-2 oxygenates. An optimal reaction temperature of around 500 K is theoretically rationalized. COOH is the key intermediate in CO2 activation, and the CO insertion with CHx highly contributes to the C-C bond coupling. Formation of ethanol is directly competitive with that of methane. The activity dependences on reaction conditions are different between CO2 and CO hydrogenation. The formation energy scaling relations of intermediates and transition states between the different Pd surfaces were established, providing a simplified strategy to estimate transition state energies on other surfaces for microkinetic simulation. All these constitute the key foundation for the rational design of metal catalysts and optimization of reaction conditions for CO2 hydrogenation to C-1 & C-2 oxygenates.
引用
收藏
页码:4866 / 4881
页数:16
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