Back to Search
Start Over
Adsorption and Hydrogenation of Carbon Monoxide on Polycrystalline Rhodium at High Gas Pressures
- Source :
- The Journal of Physical Chemistry - Part B; April 10, 1997, Vol. 101 Issue: 15 p2874-2883, 10p
- Publication Year :
- 1997
-
Abstract
- Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) in conjunction with mass spectroscopy (MS) has been utilized to investigate the adsorption and hydrogenation of carbon monoxide on polycrystalline rhodium surfaces. The SERS-active Rh substrates were prepared by electrodeposition of ultrathin films on electrochemically roughened gold and display remarkably robust SERS activity over a wide range of temperatures (up to 400 °C) and pressures (here up to 1 atm). The SER spectra reveal that CO adsorbed primarily on atop sites (ν<INF>Rh</INF><INF>-</INF><INF>C</INF> = 470 cm<SUP>-1</SUP>) and desorbed by about 250−300 °C under all gas-phase conditions examined. Partial dissociation of the CO adlayer, however, was obtained at temperatures as low as 100 °C, most likely facilitated by the large number of steps and kinks present on these roughened surfaces. This was evidenced by a partial removal of CO at temperatures (ca 100 °C) well below those expected for thermal desorption (200−250 °C) and supported by the observed formation of surface carbonate (665 cm<SUP>-1</SUP>) under these conditions. The CO dissociation, however, is hampered at lower temperatures (&lt;200 °C) when gas-phase H<INF>2</INF> and/or CO are present, most likely due to blocking of site ensembles necessary for decomposition to proceed. Interestingly, heating a CO adlayer in pure H<INF>2</INF> resulted in the formation of an adsorbed oxygen species (ν<INF>Rh</INF><INF>-</INF><INF>O</INF> = 295 cm<SUP>-1</SUP>) at temperatures above 250 °C. The CO hydrogenation reaction was examined over a wide range of gas-phase conditions (H<INF>2</INF>:CO = 99:1 to 4:1 at 1 atm), with methane being the only hydrocarbon product detectable with MS. In addition to the presence of adsorbed CO observed up to 250 °C under all H<INF>2</INF>/CO reaction ratios, the adsorbed oxygen species noted above was detected at higher temperatures (>250 °C) when a low percentage of CO (≤1%) in the feed reactant stream was used. The influence of the adsorbed species on the overall methanation rates is discussed in light of these findings. Utilizing the seconds time-scale resolution of SERS, the exchange between gas-phase and adsorbed CO was also studied. The results of such transient <SUP>13</SUP>CO/<SUP>12</SUP>CO exchange experiments reveal that this desorption pathway is weakly activated (≈1 kcal mol<SUP>-1</SUP>), first order with respect to CO coverage, yet independent of CO partial pressure in the regime studied (8−760 Torr). This contrasts the first-order pressure dependence for much lower CO partial pressures (≤10<SUP>-5</SUP> Torr) reported earlier in the literature. A rate law and mechanism are proposed which account for these differences and rationalize the observed behavior.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 15206106 and 15205207
- Volume :
- 101
- Issue :
- 15
- Database :
- Supplemental Index
- Journal :
- The Journal of Physical Chemistry - Part B
- Publication Type :
- Periodical
- Accession number :
- ejs1128719