Transient experiments using mass and FTIR spectroscopy as detectors are performed at 300 K with a reduced 2.9% Pt/Al2O3 catalyst to study the reduction of strongly adsorbed oxygen species (denoted Osads) formed by O2 chemisorption using several y% CO/z% Ar/He mixtures (y and z in the range 0.5–10). During the first seconds of the reaction C mass balances reveal that the CO consumption is mainly due to the formation of a strongly adsorbed CO species identified as a linear CO species (denoted L) interacting with the Osads species (IR band at 2084 cm−1). The evolution of the CO2 production rate with time on stream presents different profiles according to the reaction temperature: decreasing exponential at Tr<273 K and peak profiles for Tr⩾300 K. The CO2 production at Tr<273 K is in agreement with a kinetic model considering two elementary steps: the adsorption of the L CO species without competition with Osads followed by a L–H elementary step (denoted S3b): Osads+L→CO2ads, with a rate constant k3b=ν3bexp(−E3b/RT) and E3b=65 kJ/mol at θOsads≈1. For Tr>300 K, mass transfer processes contribute to the apparent CO2 production rate. At high θOsads values, they compete with the surface reactions for 273 K
360 K. However, kinetic studies can be performed at Tr>300 K after a significant decrease in θOsads due to the increase in E3b: E3b=110 kJ/mol at θOsads=0.4. Several conclusions of the present study are in very good agreement with the reduction of Osads species on Pt single crystals using a CO molecular beam under UHV conditions.
Keywords :
Paraformaldehyde
Journal title :
Journal of Catalysis
Journal title :
Journal of Catalysis