Literature DB >> 32520058

Promoting effect of tungsten carbide on the catalytic activity of Cu for CO2 reduction.

Andrey A Koverga1, Elizabeth Flórez2, Ludovic Dorkis3, José A Rodriguez4.   

Abstract

The adsorption of H, CO2, HCOO, O and CO on copper monolayers and submonolayers supported on hexagonal WC(0001) surfaces has been investigated. Calculations have been performed using density functional theory with the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof exchange correlation functional and D2 van der Waals corrections. In addition, dipole corrections were also included. The catalytic properties of supported Cu on both carbon- and metal-terminated WC(0001) surfaces were explored. On carbon-terminated WC(0001) surfaces, Cu tends to be oxidized, while on the metallic terminated surface, it gains charge. The results indicate that all studied Cu/WC(0001) surfaces bind all adsorbates stronger than the extended Cu(111). For CO, the binding energy is so large in some cases (1.6-2.2 eV) that it could potentially lead to catalyst deactivation. Nevertheless, surfaces with an adsorbed Cu monolayer, CuML, are less prone to this deactivation, since there are not WC surface atoms; and thus, the contribution of strong CO adsorption from the support does not play a role. Energy barriers for HCOO formation, relative to direct dissociation barriers of CO2, indicate that a hydrogen-assisted reduction path is more likely to occur on Cu/WC(0001) materials, with CuML/metallic termination being the most active system for this reaction path. On the other hand, CO2 adsorption on CuML surfaces is slightly weaker on a C-terminated surface than on a metal-terminated surface, although both surfaces have similar dissociation barriers. This fact together with the weaker CO adsorption on CuML/C-terminated WC(0001) than on metal-terminated WC(0001) suggests that the former system may be a better catalyst for CO2 reduction, due to the lower surface poisoning by the CO2 dissociation products. Possible deactivation of Cu/WC(0001) materials may be prevented by the introduction of hydrogen into the system, thus promoting the formation of HCOO and avoiding CO and O formation.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32520058     DOI: 10.1039/d0cp00358a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys        ISSN: 1463-9076            Impact factor:   3.676


  1 in total

1.  Preparation of Aluminum-Molybdenum Alloy Thin Film Oxide and Study of Molecular CO + NO Conversion on Its Surface.

Authors:  Tamerlan T Magkoev; Dzhamilya G Mustafaeva; Vladislav B Zaalishvili; Oleg G Ashkhotov; Zaurbek T Sozaev
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-18       Impact factor: 3.623

  1 in total

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