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Atomically defined iron carbide surface for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis catalysis

Authors :
Ali Şems Ahsen
Jeppe V. Lauritsen
Zhongshan Li
Lutz Lammich
J.W. Niemantsverdriet
Yijia Li
Gilbère J. A. Mannie
Source :
ACS Catalysis, 9(2), 1264-1273. American Chemical Society, Li, Y, Li, Z, Ahsen, A, Lammich, L, Mannie, G J A, Niemantsverdriet, J W H & Lauritsen, J V 2019, ' Atomically Defined Iron Carbide Surface for Fischer-Tropsch Synthesis Catalysis ', ACS Catalysis, vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 1264-1273 . https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.8b03684
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Chemical Society, 2019.

Abstract

With the purpose of investigating the reactivity of Fe carbide as an active phase in Fischer-Tropsch catalysis, we studied the formation of a well-defined Fe carbide surface structure resulting from carbon exposure of an Fe film on Au(111). Using two different sources of carbon (C), namely atomic carbon and ethylene gas, we used synchrotron X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) to show that a 6 ML Fe film readily converts into a well-defined and thermodynamically stable carbide phase. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) showed that the surface of the Fe carbide film is crystalline and is dominated by Fe(110)-like facets perturbed into a (2 × 2) periodic structure due to insertion of C in the interstitial sites. The reactivity of the carbide film toward CO, H 2 , and O 2 was furthermore probed by XPS under vacuum conditions. While the pristine Fe carbide surface was unreactive toward hydrogen gas at 500 K, we interestingly found that CO dissociation from a preadsorbed monolayer of CO takes place already at low temperature. This observation points to an intrinsic activity of the Fe carbide phase where additional carbon originating from CO can be placed in the Fe carbide surface. The catalytic significance of the model catalyst surface presented here is that it can be seen as a stable Fe carbide phase with intrinsically vacant sites for additional C insertion at elevated pressure, and we propose that such additional C may act as active species in C-C coupling reactions during FTS. The studies pave the way for a better understanding of FTS processes on Fe-based catalysts on the basis of a well-defined model surface.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21555435
Volume :
9
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Catalysis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c615a916d7a23bb74b16975de7efcfa