Synthesis gas (CO + H2) conversion is a promising route to converting coal, natural gas, or biomass into synthetic liquid fuels. Rhodium has long been studied as it is the only elemental catalyst that has demonstrated selectivity to ethanol and other C2+ oxygenates. However, the fundamentals of syngas conversion over rhodium are still debated. In this work a microkinetic model is developed for conversion of CO and H2 into methane, ethanol, and acetaldehyde on the Rh (211) and (111) surfaces, chosen to describe steps and close-packed facets on catalyst particles. The model is based on DFT calculations using the BEEF-vdW functional. The mean-field kinetic model includes lateral adsorbate-adsorbate interactions, and the BEEF-vdW error estimation ensemble is used to propagate error from the DFT calculations to the predicted rates. The model shows the Rh(211) surface to be ∼6 orders of magnitude more active than the Rh(111) surface, but highly selective toward methane, while the Rh(111) surface is intrinsically selective toward acetaldehyde. A variety of Rh/SiO2 catalysts are synthesized, tested for catalytic oxygenate production, and characterized using TEM. The experimental results indicate that the Rh(111) surface is intrinsically selective toward acetaldehyde, and a strong inverse correlation between catalytic activity and oxygenate selectivity is observed. Furthermore, iron impurities are shown to play a key role in modulating the selectivity of Rh/SiO2 catalysts toward ethanol. The experimental observations are consistent with the structure-sensitivity predicted from theory. This work provides an improved atomic-scale understanding and new insight into the mechanism, active site, and intrinsic selectivity of syngas conversion over rhodium catalysts and may also guide rational design of alloy catalysts made from more abundant elements.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b12087 | DOI Listing |
ACS Nano
November 2024
Empa, nanotech@surfaces Laboratory, Dübendorf CH-8600, Switzerland.
Understanding single molecular switches is a crucial step in designing and optimizing molecular electronic devices with highly nonlinear functionalities, e.g., gate voltage-dependent current switching.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
November 2024
Department of Chemical Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Massachusetts 01609, USA.
The electrochemical environment present at surfaces can have a large effect on intended applications. Such environments may occur, for instance, at battery or electrocatalyst surfaces. Solvent, co-adsorbates, and electrical field effects may strongly influence surface chemistry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Catal
August 2024
International Tomography Center SB RAS, 3A Institutskaya St., Novosibirsk 630090, Russian Federation.
Kinetic studies are vital for gathering mechanistic insights into heterogeneously catalyzed hydrogenation of unsaturated organic compounds (olefins), where the Horiuti-Polanyi mechanism is ubiquitous on metal catalysts. While this mechanism envisions nonpairwise H addition due to the rapid scrambling of surface hydride (H*) species, a pairwise H addition is experimentally encountered, rationalized here based on density functional theory (DFT) simulations for the ethene (CH) hydrogenation catalyzed by two-dimensional (2D) MXene MoC(0001) surface and compared to Rh(111) surface. Results show that ethyl (CH*) hydrogenation is the rate-determining step (RDS) on MoC(0001), yet CH* formation is the RDS on Rh(111), which features a higher reaction rate and contribution from pairwise H addition compared to 2D-MoC(0001).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
May 2024
Functional Nanomaterials Group and Catalysis Research Center, Department of Chemistry, TUM School of Natural Sciences, Technical University of Munich, Lichtenbergstr. 4, 85748 Garching, Germany.
Ultrathin two-dimensional silica films have been suggested as highly defined conductive models for fundamental studies on silica-supported catalyst particles. Key requirements in this context are closed silica films that isolate the gas phase from the underlying metal substrate and stability under reaction conditions. Here, we present silica bilayer films grown on Pt(111) and Rh(111) and characterize them by scanning tunneling microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Catal
April 2024
Kathleen Lonsdale Materials Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University College London, London WC1H 0AJ, United Kingdom.
CO hydrogenation over Rh catalysts comprises multiple reaction pathways, presenting a wide range of possible intermediates and end products, with selectivity toward either CO or methane being of particular interest. We investigate in detail the reaction mechanism of CO hydrogenation to the single-carbon (C1) products on the Rh(111) facet by performing periodic density functional theory (DFT) calculations and kinetic Monte Carlo (kMC) simulations, which account for the adsorbate interactions through a cluster expansion approach. We observe that Rh readily facilitates the dissociation of hydrogen, thus contributing to the subsequent hydrogenation processes.
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