1. Temperature-dependent ethylene dissociative adsorption on ruthenium.
- Author
-
Jiao, Yueyue, Ma, Huan, Wang, Hui, Li, Yong−Wang, Wen, Xiao−Dong, and Jiao, Haijun
- Subjects
- *
RUTHENIUM , *ADSORPTION (Chemistry) , *GIBBS' free energy , *ETHYLENE , *ACTIVATION energy - Abstract
[Display omitted] • Temperature-dependent ethylene dissociative adsorption on ruthenium was computed quantitatively. • Revised PBE can best quantify the adsorption energy of ethylene, H 2 and CO. • Computed activation barriers of the dissociation of CH 2 CH 2 * and CH 3 C* agree quantitively with experiments. • CO co-adsorption stabilizes CH 3 C* by blocking surface sites and raising the dissociation barrier. • BEP relationship is found for the formation of CH 3 C* and HCC under the co-adsorbed CO and hydrogen. The dissociative adsorption of ethylene onto Ru(1 1 1) at different temperatures was computed systematically at the first time. At 105 K, ethylene dissociative adsorption has the co-adsorbed CH 2 C*+2H* and CH 3 C*+H* as the first and second stable surface intermediates. At over 330 K, CH 3 C*+H* is converted back into CH 2 C* accompanied by H 2 desorption and the subsequent dissociation of CH 2 C* into HCC*, HC*+C* and 2C*. The computed Arrhenius activation barriers of the dissociation of CH 2 CH 2 (0.18 vs. 0.22 ± 0.04 eV) and CH 3 C (0.54 vs. 0.52 ± 0.04 eV) agree perfectly with the available experimental values, and CH 3 C* represents the most stable surface species. Under CO co-adsorption, the most stable surface species are the co-adsorbed CH 3 C*+H*+3CO*. It is found that CO co-adsorption promotes H 2 desorption and stabilizes CH 3 C* by blocking the surface sites for dissociation and raises the dissociation barrier compared to the clean surface (0.78 vs 0.54 eV). Brønsted–Evans–Polanyi relationship between the activation Gibbs free energy barrier and reaction Gibbs free energy is found for CH 2 C*+2H*+ n CO* = CH 3 C*+H*+ n CO* and CH 2 C*+2H*+ n CO* = HCC*+3H*+ n CO* (n = 0–3). Ethylene adsorption has di-σ and π adsorption configurations in very close energy, and H 2 has adsorption energy of about 0.90 eV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF