Title of article
Acrolein coupling on reduced TiO2(1 1 0): The effect of surface oxidation and the role of subsurface defects
Author/Authors
Benz، نويسنده , , Lauren and Haubrich، نويسنده , , Jan and Quiller، نويسنده , , Ryan G. and Friend، نويسنده , , Cynthia M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
8
From page
1010
To page
1017
Abstract
Reactions of acrolein, water, and oxygen with the vacuum-reduced surface of TiO2(1 1 0) are reported in a temperature programmed reaction study of the interaction of an aldehydic pollutant with a reducible metal oxide. A total of 25% of the acrolein that binds to the surface is converted to products. Notably, carbon–carbon coupling occurs with 86% selectivity for formation of C6 products: C6H8, identified as 1,3-cyclohexadiene, in a peak at 500 K and benzene immediately thereafter at 530 K. Acrolein is evolved from the surface in three peaks: a peak independent of coverage at 495 K, attributed to decomposition of an intermediate that is partly converted to C6H8; a coverage-dependent peak that shifts from 370 K (low coverage) to 260 K (high coverage), which is attributed to adsorption at 5-fold coordinated Ti sites; and a multilayer state at 160 K. Water and acrolein compete for 5-fold coordinated titanium sites when dosed sequentially. The addition of water also opens a new reaction pathway, leading to the hydrogenation of acrolein to form propanal. Water has no effect on the yield of 1,3-cyclohexadiene. Exposure of the surface to oxygen prior to acrolein dosing quenches the evolution of acrolein at 495 K and concurrently eliminates the coupling. From these results, we propose that reduced subsurface defects such as titanium ion interstitials play a role in the reactions observed here. The notion that subsurface defects may contribute to the reactivity of organic molecules over reducible oxide substrates may prove to be general.
Keywords
Titanium dioxide , Temperature programmed reaction , Coupling reaction , Oxygen vacancies , Subsurface defects , Interstitials , Point Defects , Acrolein
Journal title
Surface Science
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Surface Science
Record number
1704527
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