Facilitating Hydrogen Dissociation over Dilute Nanoporous Ti-Cu Catalysts.

J Am Chem Soc

Materials Science Division, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94550, United States.

Published: September 2022

The dissociation of H is an essential elementary step in many industrial chemical transformations, typically requiring precious metals. Here, we report a hierarchical nanoporous Cu catalyst doped with small amounts of Ti (npTiCu) that increases the rate of H-D exchange by approximately one order of magnitude compared to the undoped nanoporous Cu (npCu) catalyst. The promotional effect of Ti was measured via steady-state H-D exchange reaction experiments under atmospheric pressure flow conditions in the temperature range of 300-573 K. Pretreatment with flowing H is required for stable catalytic performance, and two temperatures, 523 and 673 K, were investigated. The experimentally determined H-D exchange rate is 5-7 times greater for npTiCu vs the undoped Cu material under optimized pretreatment and reaction temperatures. The H pretreatment leads to full reduction of Cu oxide and partial reduction of surface Ti oxide species present in the as-prepared catalyst as demonstrated using in situ ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and X-ray absorption spectroscopy. The apparent activation energies and pre-exponential factors measured for H-D exchange are substantially different for Ti-doped vs undoped npCu catalysts. Density functional theory calculations suggest that isolated, metallic Ti atoms on the surface of the Cu host can act as the active surface sites for hydrogen recombination. The increase in the rate of exchange above that of pure Cu is caused primarily by a shift in the rate-determining step from dissociative adsorption on Cu to H/D atom recombination on Ti-doped Cu, with the corresponding decrease in activation entropy that it produces.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c00830DOI Listing

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