4.6 Article

Kinetic modeling of nitrous oxide decomposition on Fe-ZSM-5 in the presence of nitric oxide based on parameters obtained from first-principles calculations

Journal

CATALYSIS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages 3539-3555

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cy00252j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. South Carolina Smart State Center for Strategic Approaches to the Generation of Electricity (SAGE)

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This study investigated the comprehensive reaction mechanism of N2O decomposition over Fe-ZSM-5 catalysts at different temperatures. It was found that different iron species at different temperatures play a crucial role in the catalytic process. The concentration of nitric oxide and water vapor determines the switch between the most dominant active sites.
A variety of experiments for the N2O decomposition over Fe-ZSM-5 catalysts have been simulated in the presence and absence of small amounts of nitric oxide and water vapor. A comprehensive reaction mechanism over mononuclear iron sites was considered, and all elementary reaction rate constants were obtained from density functional theory and transition state theory. Various experimental observations, such as the acceleration of the N2O decomposition in the presence of nitric oxide at low temperatures, can be described with the studied reaction mechanism on mononuclear iron sites. No other iron species, such as binuclear iron, are necessary for explaining experimental observations. At high temperatures, Z(-)[FeO](+) sites are active for N2O decomposition, forming either Z(-)[OFeO](+) and Z(-)[FeO2](+) sites on which a second N2O can decompose to form Z(-)[OFeO2](+) sites from which O-2 can rapidly desorb. At low temperatures, nitric oxide activates water poisoned Z(-)[Fe(OH)(2)](+) sites to form active Z(-)[FeOH](+) species. The catalytic cycle on Z(-)[FeOH](+) involves N2O dissociation to form Z(-)[OFeOH](+) sites that are inactive for a second N2O decomposition. Instead, NO adsorbs and NO2 desorbs in order to regenerate the Z(-)[FeOH](+) sites. On all active iron sites, the first N2O dissociation step is the most critical rate-controlling step. The concentration of nitric oxide and water vapor together determine at which temperature the switch between the most dominant active site (hydroxo- versus oxo-iron species) occurs. Overall, this study motivates the investigation of Z(-)[OFeOH](+) sites as potential alpha-oxygen species that can oxidize various hydrocarbons at low temperatures.

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