Equilibria and Dynamics of Gas Adsorption on Heterogeneous Solid Surfaces

Equilibria and Dynamics of Gas Adsorption on Heterogeneous Solid Surfaces

Author: W.A. Steele

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 1996-12-17

Total Pages: 909

ISBN-13: 0080531199

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The fact that the surfaces of real solids are geometrically distorted and chemically non-uniform has long been realized by the scientists investigating various phenomena occurring on solid surfaces. Even in the case when diffraction experiments show a well-organized bulk solid structure, the surface atoms or molecules will usually exhibit a much smaller degree of surface organization. In addition to the results obtained from electron diffraction, this can be seen in the impressive images obtained from STM and AFM microscopies. This geometric and chemical disorder is the source of the energetic heterogeneity for molecules adsorbing on real solid surfaces. Hundreds of papers have been published showing that this heterogeneity is a major factor in determining the behaviour of real adsorption systems. Studies of adsorption on energetically heterogeneous surfaces have proceeded along three somewhat separate paths, with only minor coupling of ideas. One was the study of adsorption equilibria on heterogeneous solid surfaces. The second path was the study of time evolution of adsorption processes such as surface diffusion or adsorption-desorption kinetics on heterogeneous surfaces, and the third was the study of adsorption in porous solids, or more generally, adsorption in systems with limited dimensions. The present monograph is a first attempt to provide a synthesis of the ways that surface geometric and energetic heterogeneities affect both the equilibria and the time evolution of adsorption on real solids. The book contains 17 chapters written by a team of internationally recognized specialists, some of whom have already published books on adsorption.


Adsorption Calculations and Modelling

Adsorption Calculations and Modelling

Author: Howard Brenner

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2013-10-22

Total Pages: 257

ISBN-13: 148329224X

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'Adsorption Calculations and Modelling' provides readers with practical, useful information about how to make adsorption calculations and formulate models describing adsorption processes. Unlike most books on this subject, this book treats both gas phase adsorption and liquid phase adsorption with equal emphasis, and supplies a rigorous treatment of multi-component adsorption. It also covers adsorption applications in environmental applications including the use of impregnated adsorbents for protection against toxic gases and carbon adsorption in water and wastewater treatment. Explores the most up-to-date information on multicomponent adsorption Details adsorption applications in environmental application Explains the fundamentals of adsorption calculation in a simple, straightforward manner.


Energetics of Small Molecules and Molecular Fragments on Model Catalyst Surfaces

Energetics of Small Molecules and Molecular Fragments on Model Catalyst Surfaces

Author: Griffin Michael Ruehl

Publisher:

Published: 2022

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Heterogeneous catalysis is essential for the development and support of modern society, with the vast majority of chemical production processes reliant on catalysts. New catalysts and catalytic reactions constitute promising pathways forward in combatting the effects of climate change and transitioning human society off of our reliance on fossil fuels. However, there is an absence of a complete fundamental understanding of observed differences and trends in catalytic behavior that impedes the rapid, strategic development of new catalytic processes. Computational modeling methods, such as Density Functional Theory (DFT), constitute powerful tools for the rapid screening of catalyst materials, but these methods have large errors in energy accuracy which severely limit their quantitative predictive abilities. These methods are dependent on experimentally determined benchmarks to guide modifications for improving their energy accuracy. The technique of single crystal adsorption calorimetry (SCAC) is uniquely able to study the energetics of irreversible adsorption processes on well-defined surface sites. SCAC can therefore provide these key benchmarks and fundamental understandings of the energetics of molecular and dissociative adsorption into molecular fragments and other key surface reaction intermediates commonly seen in industrial catalytic applications. This dissertation presents experimental SCAC results for the study of the energetics of adsorption of small molecules and molecular fragments on model catalyst surfaces, namely Pt(111) and Cu(111). This work builds upon previous efforts from the Campbell group to develop a systematic understanding of trends and observed differences in catalytic behavior on late-transition metal catalysts. Additionally, by employing models recently developed by this group, we are able to estimate the adhesion energies of liquid solvents to clean, single-crystal metal surfaces from the experimental calorimetry results. This allows for the estimation of the effects of each solvent on the energetics of adsorption and desorption for surface reactants and intermediates of interest. The study of the energetics of acetonitrile and n¬-decane adsorption on Pt(111), two solvents of particular interest, are reported here. Acetonitrile an important solvent due to its unique, desirable properties which make it of particular interest for electrochemical applications and the engineering of mixed solvent environments. n-Decane is similarly of interest in catalysis as linear alkanes of that and similar size are commonly used as solvents in catalytic reactions over Pt-group metals. From the experimentally determined heat of adsorption versus coverage we estimate adhesion energies of these liquid solvents to the Pt(111) surface to be Eadh = 0.198 J/m2 for acetonitrile and Eadh = 0.148 J/m2 for n-decane. Additionally, the adhesion energy of liquid formic acid to Cu(111) is estimated to be Eadh = 0.271 J/m2. These values can be used to quantify the solvent effects of these species on the local surface reaction environment. The calorimetrically measured heats of adsorption versus coverage are reported here for acetonitrile on Pt(111) at 100 K and 180 K, n-¬decane adsorption on Pt(111) at 150 K, azulene adsorption on Pt(111) at 150 K, and for both the molecular and dissociative adsorption of formic acid on clean and oxygen-precovered Cu(111). In combination with previously reported experimental results and DFT simulations of these systems, a number of important fundamental insights are drawn. The analysis of the n-decane heats of adsorption in comparison to a previous TPD study of shorter linear alkanes extends the observed trends to larger species such as n-decane that desorb irreversibly. Namely, we report that the adsorption energy increases nearly proportionally to carbon number, and the adhesion energy remains nearly constant (for a given surface). Naphthalene and azulene are of particular interest as representative molecules for the regular structure of graphene and the most common defect found in graphene sheets, respectively. Therefore the study of their adsorption energetics can inform experimental and computational systems involving graphene more broadly. Comparison of the heats of adsorption for azulene on Pt(111) first presented here with previous results for naphthalene and DFT simulations of both show that azulene binds significantly stronger to Pt(111) (by ~100 kJ/mol) than its isomer naphthalene. We show that DFT accurately predicts the adsorption energy of azulene but overestimates the binding energy of naphthalene, indicating that DFT is not accurately modeling the energy differences between these two systems. We report here the dissociative adsorption of formic acid on oxygen-precovered Cu(111), which results in the formation of adsorbed bidentate formate and gaseous water at 240 K. Formic acid and formate are common intermediates in a variety of reactions on late transition metals, ranging from well-established industrial reactions to emergent clean energy technologies. From the heats of this dissociative adsorption reaction, we extract a bond enthalpy of bidentate formate to Cu(111) of 335 kJ/mol, and an enthalpy of formation of bidentate formate on Cu(111) of -465 kJ/mol. We show that these enthalpies are slightly greater than those on Ni(111) (by ~15 kJ/mol) and significantly greater than those on Pt(111) (by ~85 kJ/mol). This is in opposition to the predicted order of bond strength from DFT, where Ni is predicted to bind formate more strongly than Cu, and indicates that DFT is not accurately modeling this trend in adsorption between these three surfaces. This study also constitutes the first experimental measurement of the energetics of any adsorbed molecular fragment on any Cu surface. In comparison to previous results on Pt(111) and Ni(111) this allows for the direct comparison of a single molecular fragment on all three surfaces for the first time. This forms a suite of key experimental benchmarks for improving the energy accuracy of computational models like DFT, as well as crucial fundamental insights into trends and observed differences in catalysis on late-transition metal surfaces. Lastly, we report a detailed kinetics study of the aqueous-phase hydrogenation of phenol and benzaldehyde on Pt, Pd, and Rh using small-scale thermal and electrocatalytic reactors. These molecules represent common intermediates in the process of breaking down biomass and converting its constituents into biofuels and other value-added chemicals. This work shows that the observed catalytic behavior is well fit by a Langmuir-Hinshelwood mechanism with competitive adsorption (organic versus hydrogen adsorption) on terrace, or (111)-like, sites. Additionally, we report that adsorbed benzaldehyde inhibits the formation of a bulk Pd-hydride whereas phenol does not, explaining the extreme differences in observed catalytic activity between these two systems. This work informs efforts to correlate molecular structure of biomass intermediates of interest with catalytic activity on late-transition metal catalysts.


Energetics of Small Molecules and Molecular Fragments on Model Catalyst Surfaces

Energetics of Small Molecules and Molecular Fragments on Model Catalyst Surfaces

Author: S. Elizabeth Harman

Publisher:

Published: 2022

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Heterogenous catalysts are essential for our society. From the production of food and energy to the manufacture of chemicals and the mitigation of pollution, catalysts touch every facet of our lives. In order to maintain our way of life and improve our energy systems it is critical to seek out new and better catalysts. We need continual improvement in our catalysts and processes to continue supporting our society’s growth. Modeling methods such as Density Functional Theory (DFT) do great work in exploring new catalyst materials. By using quantum mechanical first principles and experimentally determined adsorbate bond enthalpies of catalytic intermediates, DFT can predict the energetics of individual steps of complex reactions on catalyst surfaces. However, DFT suffers from errors in absolute energy accuracy, which in turn leads to large errors in predicted reaction rates. It’s imperative that we improve these models. By experimentally measuring the energetics of catalytically relevant species on catalysts surfaces, critical benchmarks for DFT and other modeling methods can be provided. Of the available experimental methods, Single-Crystal Adsorption Calorimetry (SCAC) is the only technique capable of directly measuring the binding energies of adsorbates on surfaces that do not adsorb and then desorb reversibly. This dissertation details the use of SCAC to measure the heats of adsorption of a variety of catalytically relevant molecular fragments on the Pt(111), Ni(111) and Cu(111) surfaces, including the first direct measurement of the heat of adsorption of any molecular fragment on a Cu surface. These measurements continue a decades-long effort by the Campbell group to supply critical benchmarks of experimentally determined energetics of small molecules and molecular fragments on model catalyst surfaces. This work also details the calculated adhesion energies of several small molecules on these transition metal surfaces using a method recently developed by the Campbell group. In the following chapters, SCAC is used to measure the heats of adsorption of methanol and methoxy on Ni(111). Ni is a common catalyst for steam reforming and methanol synthesis, while methoxy is a common intermediate in those processes. SCAC is also used to make the first measurement of the energetics of adsorption of any molecular fragment on a Cu surface, here the dissociative adsorption of formic acid on oxygen-precovered Cu(111) to form bidentate formate and gaseous water. Cu is a promising monometallic catalysts for the reduction of CO2, where formate is an intermediate. The adhesion energy of molecular formic acid on Cu(111) is also presented. The energetics of several species to Pt(111) are measured via SCAC. We use azulene as an analogue for defects in graphene, and its isomer naphthalene for well ordered graphene, to examine their energetic differences on Pt(111). The heat of adsorption of n-decane on Pt(111) is measured and compared to previous work via Temperature Programmed Desorption (TPD). The adhesion energy of n-decane is calculated and compared to the adhesion energy of shorter linear alkanes on Pt(111) to show that adhesion energy remains nearly constant as chain length increases due to the per unit area definition of adhesion energy. Finally, the heat of adsorption and adhesion energy of acetonitrile on Pt(111) are reported. Acetonitrile is a common solvent in electrocatalysis, where Pt is a common electrode material, in addition to being the simplest organic nitrile. These fundamental energetics provide important benchmarks for DFT modeling, especially on Cu(111) where there is a lack of experimental measurements.


Chemical Complexity via Simple Models

Chemical Complexity via Simple Models

Author: Valeriy I. Bykov

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2018-01-22

Total Pages: 439

ISBN-13: 3110465140

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This book is focused on mathematical modelling of chemical kinetics. The authors present the classification of basic models of chemical kinetics, thermokinetics and macrokinetics, as well as their application for the most important chemical transformations, such as combustion and catalysis. Readers will find a detailed description and analysis of different mathematical instruments which can be applied for simulation of reaction dynamics.


Surface and Nanomolecular Catalysis

Surface and Nanomolecular Catalysis

Author: Ryan Richards

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2006-05-25

Total Pages: 555

ISBN-13: 1420015753

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Using new instrumentation and experimental techniques that allow scientists to observe chemical reactions and molecular properties at the nanoscale, the authors of Surface and Nanomolecular Catalysis reveal new insights into the surface chemistry of catalysts and the reaction mechanisms that actually occur at a molecular level during catalys


Catalytic Kinetics

Catalytic Kinetics

Author: Dmitry Yu Murzin

Publisher: Elsevier

Published: 2005-11-07

Total Pages: 485

ISBN-13: 0080455468

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Chemistry and chemical technology have been at the heart of the revolutionary developments of the 20th century. The chemical industry has a long history of combining theory (science) and practice (engineering) to create new and useful products. Worldwide, the process industry (which includes chemicals, petrochemicals, petroleum refining, and pharmaceuticals) is a huge, complex, and interconnected global business with an annual production value exceeding 4 trillion dollars. Although in industry special focus is in heterogeneous catalysis, homogeneous, enzymatic, photochemical and electrochemical catalysis should not be overlooked; as the major aim is to produce certain chemicals in the best possible way, applying those types of catalysis, which suit a particular process in the most optimal way. Catalysis according to the very definition of it deals with enhancement of reaction rates, that is, with catalytic kinetics. This book unifies the main sub disciplines forming the cornerstone of catalytic kinetics. * Provides a broad overview catalytic kinetics* Bridges the gaps that exist between hetero-, homo- and bio-catalysis* Written by internationally renowned experts in this field