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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Catalysis Année : 2009

Alkene hydrogenation on metal surfaces: Why and when are Pd overlayers more efficient catalysts than bulk Pd?

Résumé

Previous works have shown that palladium overlayers (Pd/Ni, Pd/Cu) are more active than pure Pd surfaces for alkene hydrogenation. These results have been ascribed to the specific nanostructure of the alloy surfaces. Here, we compare Pd(100), Pd(110) and Pd8Ni92(110) single-crystal surfaces toward 1,3-butadiene hydrogenation and hydrogen absorption, using a gas-phase static reactor We show that the. lower rate of butene formation on clean I'd surfaces can in fact be explained by the initial fast diffusion of hydrogen into the Pd crystal (conversely, hydrogen dissolution in Pd-Ni is negligible). However, the activity of Pd becomes higher at steady state, i.e. after several reaction cycles, due to the increase of the near-surface H concentration. Unlike the butane formation rate, the partial hydrogenation rate appears poorly affected by the I'd surface structure. These results suggest that, when hydrogen supply is rate-determining, hydrogen absorption effects can be more critical than structural effects for Pd-catalyzed hydrogenations. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Domaines

Catalyse

Dates et versions

hal-00430903 , version 1 (10-11-2009)

Identifiants

Citer

A. Valcarcel, F. Morfin, L. Piccolo. Alkene hydrogenation on metal surfaces: Why and when are Pd overlayers more efficient catalysts than bulk Pd?. Journal of Catalysis, 2009, 263 (2), pp.315-320. ⟨10.1016/j.jcat.2009.02.023⟩. ⟨hal-00430903⟩
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