4.4 Article

Hydrogenation of Carbon Dioxide on Rh, Au and Au-Rh Bimetallic Clusters Supported on Titanate Nanotubes, Nanowires and TiO2

Journal

TOPICS IN CATALYSIS
Volume 55, Issue 11-13, Pages 747-756

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11244-012-9862-7

Keywords

CO2 hydrogenation; Titania nanowire; Titania nanotube; Core-shell structure; Gold; Rhodium

Funding

  1. Hungarian Science Foundation (OTKA) [K 76489]
  2. [TAMOP-4.2.1/B-09/1/KONV-2010-000]
  3. [HU RO/0901/090/2.2.2]

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Supported gold, rhodium and bimetallic rhodium-core-gold-shell catalysts were prepared. The supports were TiO2 as well as titanate nanotube and nanowire formed in the hydrothermal conversion of titania. The catalytic properties were tested in the CO2 hydrogenation at 493 K. The amount and the reactivity of the surface carbonaceous deposit were determined by temperature-programmed reduction. The surfaces of the materials were characterized by X-ray photoelectron and low-energy ion scattering spectroscopy (LEIS). The surface forms during the catalytic reaction were identified by DRIFT spectroscopy. On the XP spectra of bimetallic catalysts the existence of highly dispersed gold particles could be observed besides the metallic form on all supports. Small Rh particles could also be identified on the titanate supports. LEIS spectra demonstrated that Rh-core-Au-shell particles formed, since no scattering from Rh was detected. The main product of CO2 hydrogenation was CH4 on all catalysts. IR spectra revealed the existence of CO and formate species on the surface. In addition, a new band was observed around 1,770 cm(-1) which was assigned as tilted CO. It is bonded to Rh and interacts with a nearby the oxygen vacancy of the support. Agglomeration of highly dispersed Rh was observed on bimetallic samples induced by reaction or reactant.

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