Bh. Sakakini et As. Verbrugge, TEMPERATURE-PROGRAMMED SURFACE-REACTION AS A MEANS OF CHARACTERIZING SUPPORTED-METAL CATALYSTS AND PROBING THEIR SURFACE REACTIVITY, Journal of the Chemical Society. Faraday transactions, 93(8), 1997, pp. 1637-1640
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry Physical","Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical
A series of ruthenium-copper bimetallic catalysts on silica were prepa
red by the co-impregnation method. The amount of ruthenium was maintai
ned constant at 1 wt.%. Copper loadings varied from 0.01 to 0.1 wt.%.
Catalysts were characterized using surface area measurements (BET), CO
adsorption followed by temperature-programmed surface reaction (TPSR)
of the pre-adsorbed CO with hydrogen to form mainly methane. TPSR pro
files (methane profiles) were used to calculate CO uptake, dispersion,
metal surface area and crystallite size. Peak temperature, T-max, was
taken as a measure of the reactivity of the surface for the methanati
on reaction. CO uptake was observed to increase with copper addition,
which could be attributed to some kind of ligand effect. Peak temperat
ure was seen to shift to higher temperatures with increasing copper co
ntent, indicative of a decline in the rate of the methanation reaction
with copper addition. It is suggested that this could be due to a dec
rease in the dissociation rate of CO on the bimetallic catalysts. TPSR
profiles were also used to calculate the activation energies, E-a, of
the methanation reaction over the catalysts used using three differen
t methods, namely Redhead; Chan, Aris and Weinberg (CAW); and Arrheniu
s plots based on lineshape analysis of the resulting TPSR profiles. It
is significant that, regardless of the method used for estimating E-a
, no appreciable change in its value is observed with increasing coppe
r content, which might indicate that no change in the mechanism of rea
ction occurs with copper addition.