Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
62194 Journal of Catalysis 2009 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Density-functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed to determine the structure and stability of oxygen, carbon monoxide and sulfur adsorption on Cu(111), (100) and (110) surfaces that are in equilibrium with a water–gas shift (WGS) reactive environment of H2, H2S, H2O and CO. An atomistic thermodynamic framework based on DFT was used for describing the phase behaviors of the adsorbates on different Cu facets. Phase diagrams of each possible adsorbate on each surface were constructed as a function of the corresponding chemical potential which showed sulfur poisoning occurs even at ppm levels of H2S in the environment at low temperatures. Under reaction conditions relevant to WGS at low temperature, CO and S adsorbed surface structures were found to be more stable then the clean catalyst surfaces. At high temperatures and high hydrogen pressures, a poisoned surface can be regenerated back to a clean surface. The shapes of a Cu nanoparticle in the WGS reaction conditions under various sulfur chemical potentials were determined using the Wulff construction. We found that the crystal shape changes significantly from one dominated by (111) and (100) facets at very low sulfur chemical potentials to a shape dominated by (110) facets at higher sulfur chemical potentials, suggesting that reactive site distributions may change under reaction conditions.

Graphical abstractCatalyst morphologies and adsorbate coverages depend sensitively on the reactive environment conditions such as pressure and temperature. As a result, the distribution of active sites may be environment-dependent.Figure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload high-quality image (40 K)Download as PowerPoint slide

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Catalysis
Authors
, ,