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Reverse Water-Gas Shift or Sabatier Methanation on Ni(110)? Stable Surface Species at Near-Ambient Pressure

Authors :
Axel Knop-Gericke
Erik Vesselli
Carlo Dri
Mark T. Greiner
Giovanni Comelli
Matteo Roiaz
Robert Schlögl
Enrico Monachino
Roiaz, Matteo
Monachino, Enrico
Dri, Carlo
Greiner, Mark
Knop Gericke, Axel
Schlögl, Robert
Comelli, Giovanni
Vesselli, Erik
Source :
Journal of the American Chemical Society, 138 (2016): 4146–4154. doi:10.1021/jacs.5b13366, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Roiaz, Matteo; Monachino, Enrico; Dri, Carlo; Greiner, Mark; Knop-Gericke, Axel; Schloegl, Robert; Comelli, Giovanni; Vesselli, Erik/titolo:Reverse Water-Gas Shift or Sabatier Methanation on Ni(110)? Stable Surface Species at Near-Ambient Pressure/doi:10.1021%2Fjacs.5b13366/rivista:Journal of the American Chemical Society (Print)/anno:2016/pagina_da:4146/pagina_a:4154/intervallo_pagine:4146–4154/volume:138
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The interaction of CO, CO2, CO + H2, CO2 + H2, and CO + CO2 + H2 with the nickel (110) single crystal termination has been investigated at 10(-1) mbar in situ as a function of the surface temperature in the 300-525 K range by means of infrared-visible sum frequency generation (IR-vis SFG) vibrational spectroscopy and by near-ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS). Several stable surface species have been observed and identified. Besides atomic carbon and precursors for graphenic C phases, five nonequivalent CO species have been distinguished, evidencing the role of coadsorption effects with H and C atoms, of H-induced activation of CO, and of surface reconstruction. At low temperature, carbonate species produced by the interaction of CO2 with atomic oxygen, which stems from the dissociation of CO2 into CO + O, are found on the surface. A metastable activated CO2(-) species is also detected, being at the same time a precursor state toward dissociation into CO and O in the reverse water-gas shift mechanism and a reactive species that undergoes direct conversion in the Sabatier methanation process. Finally, the stability of ethylidyne is deduced on the basis of our spectroscopic observations.

Details

ISSN :
15205126
Volume :
138
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c191a557a2ead2a144e5e2ff4011559