• Title of article

    Thermal and adsorbate effects on the activity and morphology of size-selected Pdn/TiO2 model catalysts

  • Author/Authors

    Kaden، نويسنده , , William E. and Kunkel، نويسنده , , William A. and Roberts، نويسنده , , F. Sloan and Kane، نويسنده , , Matthew W. Anderson، نويسنده , , Scott L.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    40
  • To page
    50
  • Abstract
    Model catalysts containing size-selected Pdn (n = 1,2,4,7,10,16,20,25) deposited on rutile TiO2(110) deactivate during repeated CO oxidation temperature-programmed reaction (TPR) cycles, and the deactivation process has been probed using a combination of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS), low-energy ion scattering (ISS), temperature-dependent ion scattering (TD-ISS), annealing experiments, and temperature-programmed desorption following exposure to CO and O2 reactants. Results from such experiments suggest the cluster deactivation proceeds via an alloy-like, strong metal-support interaction (SMSI) effect that chemically modifies the clusters via electronic interactions between the supported metal atoms and Ti from the support. Threshold measurements show that this effect detrimentally affects CO-oxidation activity prior to the formation of an encapsulating overlayer by severely weakening the COPd bond strengths for binding configurations on top of the clusters. Oxidation appears to provide means of partially restoring the clusters to their initial state, but after sufficient exposure to reducing environments and elevated temperatures, all Pdn become covered by an overlayer and begin to electronically and chemically resemble freshly deposited atoms, which are completely inactive towards the probe reaction. In addition, we find evidence of oxygen spillover induced by co-adsorbed CO during TPRs for all active Pdn clusters.
  • Keywords
    XPS , TPD , SMSI , Co-oxidation , ISS , Model-catalysis
  • Journal title
    Surface Science
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Surface Science
  • Record number

    1706277