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Acetic acid conversion to ketene on Cu2O(1 0 0): Reaction mechanism deduced from experimental observations and theoretical computations

Authors :
Fredrik Johansson
Tore Brinck
J. Halldin Stenlid
Sarp Kaya
Jonas Weissenrieder
Chunlei Wang
Mohammad Panahi
Heloise Tissot
Yasmine Sassa
Royal Institute of Technology [Stockholm] (KTH )
Stockholm University
Koç University
Chalmers University of Technology [Gothenburg, Sweden]
Uppsala University
Kaya, Sarp (ORCID 0000-0002-2591-5843 & YÖK ID 116541)
Panahi, Mohammad
Tissot, H.
Halldin Stenlid, J.
Wang, C.
Brinck, T.
Sassa, Y.
Johansson, F. O. L.
Weissenrieder, J.
Koç University Tüpraş Energy Center (KUTEM) / Koç Üniversitesi Tüpraş Enerji Merkezi (KÜTEM)
College of Sciences
Graduate School of Sciences and Engineering
Department of Chemistry
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Source :
Journal of Catalysis, Journal of Catalysis, Elsevier, 2021, 402, pp.154-165. ⟨10.1016/j.jcat.2021.08.022⟩
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Ketene, a versatile reagent in production of fine and specialty chemicals, is produced from acetic acid. We investigate the synthesis of ketene from acetic acid over the (3,0;1,1) surface of Cu2O(1 0 0) through analysis of the adsorption and desorption characteristics of formic and acetic acids. The results allow us to establish a reaction mechanism for ketene formation. Observations from x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), scanning tunneling microscopy, and temperature programmed desorption (TPD), supported by a comparison with formic acid results, suggest that acetic acid reacts with Cu2O through deprotonation to form acetate species coordinated to copper sites and hydroxylation of nearby surface oxygen sites. For formic acid the decomposition of adsorbed formate species results in desorption of CO2 and CO while, for acetic acid, high yields of ketene are observed at temperature >500 K. Modeling by density functional theory (DFT) confirms the strong interaction of acetic acid with the (3,0;1,1) surface and the spontaneous dissociation into adsorbed acetate and hydrogen atom species, the latter forming an OH-group. In an identified reaction intermediate ketene binds via all C and O atoms to Cu surface sites, in agreement with interpretations from XPS. In the vicinity of the adsorbate the surface experiences a local reorganization into a c(2 × 2) reconstruction. The total computed energy barrier for ketene formation is 1.81 eV in good agreement with the 1.74 eV obtained from TPD analysis. Our experimental observations and mechanistic DFT studies suggests that Cu2O can operate as an efficient catalyst for the green generation of ketene from acetic acid.<br />Swedish Research Council (VR); VR Starting Grant; Knut och Alice Wallenbergs stiftelse; STINT Joint China-Sweden Mobility Program; Ragnar Holm Foundation; Trygger’s Foundation; Chalmers Areas of Advance-Materials Science

Details

ISSN :
00219517 and 10902694
Volume :
402
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Catalysis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....78cd7fbc9167bac190059c23a6dcbf5e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcat.2021.08.022