4.6 Article

The adsorption of nitrobenzene over an alumina-supported palladium catalyst: an infrared spectroscopic study

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 25, Issue 38, Pages 25993-26005

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3cp03028h

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The adsorption geometry of nitrobenzene on a 5 wt% Pd/Al2O3 catalyst is investigated using infrared spectroscopy and DFT calculations. It is found that the adsorption complex occurs vertically or tilted with respect to the metal surface, with a single Pd-O bond. However, there is a contradiction between the calculated and observed structures, which can be attributed to the difference between isolated molecule adsorption and multi molecule adsorption. Furthermore, the adsorption geometry of nitrobenzene is closely related to the high aniline selectivity observed for Pd/Al2O3 catalysts.
As part of an on-going programme of development of an aniline synthesis catalyst suitable for operation at elevated temperatures, the geometry of the adsorption complex for nitrobenzene on a 5 wt% Pd/Al2O3 catalyst is investigated by infrared (IR) spectroscopy. Via an appreciation of the reduced site symmetry resulting from adsorption, application of the metal surface selection rule, and observation of in-plane modes only, the adsorption complex (Pd-nitrobenzene) at 28 & DEG;C is assigned as occurring vertically or tilted with respect to the metal surface, adopting Cs & sigma;v(yz) symmetry. Moreover, adsorption occurs via a single Pd-O bond. Single molecule DFT calculations and simulated IR spectra assist vibrational assignments but indicate a parallel adsorption geometry to be energetically favourable. The contradiction between calculated and observed structures is attributed to the DFT calculations corresponding to an isolated molecule adsorption complex, while IR spectra relate to multi molecule adsorption that is encountered during sustained catalytic turnover. Residual hydrogen from the catalyst reduction stage leads to aniline formation on the Pd surface at low nitrobenzene coverages but, on increasing nitrobenzene exposure, the aniline is forced on to the alumina support. A reaction scheme is proposed whereby the nitrobenzene adsorption geometry is inherently linked to the high aniline selectivity observed for Pd/Al2O3 catalysts. The adsorption geometry of nitrobenzene over a 5 wt% Pd/Al2O3 catalyst is investigated by a combination of infrared spectroscopy and DFT calculations.

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