4.6 Article

Destruction of SO2 on An and Cu Nanoparticles Dispersed on MgO(100) and CeO2(111)

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 114, Issue 11, Pages 3802-3810

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp905761s

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-98CH10886]
  2. INTEVEP
  3. ENRI

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When going from periodic surfaces to isolated Clusters or nanoparticles, there is a big increase in the reactivity of Au and Cu toward SO2. Density functional calculations indicate that the enhancement in the SO2 adsorption energy is clue to the presence of corner sites (i.e., metal atoms with a low coordination number) and the fluxionality of the nanoparticles. Therefore, small Au particles bind SO2 stronger than a periodic Au(100) surface. However, the S <-> Au and O <-> Au interactions are not strong enough to induce the rupture of the S-O bonds. In contrast, the dissociation of SO2 on Cu particles is a very exothermic process, even more exothermic than on a periodic Cu(100.) surface. Experiments of synchrotron-based high-resolution photoemission and X-ray absorption spectroscopy show big differences ill the DeSOx activity of Au and Cu nanoparticles dispersed on MgO(100) and CeO2(111). The heat of adsorption of the SO2 on Au nanoparticles supported on MgO(100) or CeO2(111) was 0.2 to 0.4 eV larger than on Au(100) with negligible dissociation of the molecule. The full decomposition of SO2 was observed on after O vacancies were introduced ill the ceria Support. The O vacancies in ceria either played I direct role ill the dissociation of SO2 (cracking, of the molecule at the oxide-metal interface) or enhanced the Chemical activity of the supported Au nanoparticles. The addition of Cu particles to MgO(100) or CeO2(111) generates systems that are extremely active for the destruction of SO2. At 100-150 K, the SO2 adsorbs molecularly on the supported Cu particles. Heating to temperatures above 200 K leads to massive dissociation of the SO2. A comparison of the behavior of SO2 on Cu/MgO(100) and Cu/CeO2-x(111) shows how important the reducibility of the oxide support in DeSOx operations can be.

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