4.8 Article

Understanding the Role of Oxygen Vacancies in the Water Gas Shift Reaction on Ceria-Supported Platinum Catalysts

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages 2088-2096

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cs500323u

Keywords

water gas shift; platinum; ceria; reaction mechanism; in situ spectroscopies; DRIFT; time-resolved X-ray diffraction

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET)
  2. National Agency for the Promotion of Science and Technology (ANPCyT) [PICT 2012-1280]
  3. Universidad Nacional del Litoral of Argentina [CAID J379, COST CM1104, Eulanest 042, PME 2006 311, CAID 2009 J379, MINCyT-ECOS A09E01]
  4. U.S. DOE, Office of BES [DE-AC02-617 98CH10086]
  5. HPC GENCI-CINES/IDRIS [2011-x2011082131]
  6. CONICET of Argentina

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Reducible oxides have been shown to greatly improve the activity of water gas shift (WGS) catalysts. The precise mechanism for this effect is a matter of intense debate, but the dissociation of water is generally considered to be the key step in the reaction. We present here a study of the water activation on oxygen vacancies at the support as part of the mechanism of the WGS reaction on Pt supported on pure and gallium-doped ceria. Doping the ceria with gallium allows tuning the vacancies in the support while maintaining constant the metal dispersion. An inverse relationship was found between the catalytic activity to WGS and the amount of oxygen vacancies. In situ time-resolved X-ray diffraction, mass spectrometry, and diffuse reflectance infrared spectroscopy (DRIFT) showed that the oxygen vacancy filling by water is always fast in either Pt/CeO2 or Pt/CeGa. DFT calculation provides molecular insights to understand the pathway of water reaction with vacancies at the metal-oxide interface sites. Our results suggest that the activation of the water molecule in the WGS mechanism is not the rate-limiting step in these systems. Concentration-modulation spectroscopy in DRIFT mode under WGS reaction conditions allows the selective detection of key reaction intermediates, a monodentate formate (HCOO) and carboxylate (CO2 delta-) species, which suggests the prevalence of a carboxyl (HOCO) mechanism activated at the oxide-metal interface of the catalyst.

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