Mm. Ostromecki et al., THE INFLUENCE OF METAL-OXIDE ADDITIVES ON THE MOLECULAR-STRUCTURES OFSURFACE TUNGSTEN-OXIDE SPECIES ON ALUMINA - I - AMBIENT CONDITIONS, Journal of molecular catalysis. A, Chemical, 132(1), 1998, pp. 43-57
The molecular structures of WO3/Al2O3 catalysts, with and without the
presence of secondary metal oxide additives (P, Sn, Fe, Ni, Zn, Ce, Co
, La, Ca, Mg, K and Na), were determined with Raman spectroscopy under
ambient conditions where the surface is hydrated. The hydrated surfac
e tungsten oxide species found on the alumina support (WO4-2, HW6O21-5
, and U-metatungstate) were related to the net pH at the point of zero
charge (pzc) of the thin aqueous layer. The isolated tungstate specie
s was dominant at high pH values and the polytungstate species were do
minant at lower pH values. The net pH at pzc was a function of tungste
n oxide loading (decreasing from 8.9 to 4.4 for 1 to 25% WO3/Al2O3, re
spectively) and the specific secondary metal oxide additive (Na > K >
Mg > Ca > La > Co > Ce > Zn > Ni > Fe > Sn > P). Below monolayer cover
ages, the secondary metal oxide additives preferentially interacted wi
th the alumina support to form surface metal oxide species rather than
with the tungsten oxide species to form mixed tungsten oxide crystall
ine compounds. Above monolayer coverages, both surface metal oxide spe
cies and mixed tungsten oxide crystalline compounds were formed. The m
ore basic secondary metal oxide additives (Ca, La) formed mixed tungst
en oxide crystalline compounds. In the absence of the formation of mix
ed tungsten oxide crystalline compounds, the alumina support was able
to accommodate approximately two monolayer-equivalents of the surface
metal oxides during calcination because the surface tungsten oxide spe
cies and the secondary surface metal oxide species occupied different
sites on the alumina support. The surface tungsten oxide species prefe
rentially interacted with the surface hydroxyls of the alumina support
and the secondary surface metal oxide species preferentially interact
ed with coordinately unsaturated Al+3 sites. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science
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