Hydrogenation of Formate Species Using Atomic Hydrogen on a Cu(111) Model Catalyst.
Kotaro TakeyasuYasutaka SawakiTakumi ImabayashiSeptia Eka Marsha PutraHarry Handoko HalimJiamei QuanYuji HamamotoIkutaro HamadaYoshitada MorikawaTakahiro KondoTadahiro FujitaniJunji NakamuraPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
The reaction mechanism of the CH 3 OH synthesis by the hydrogenation of CO 2 on Cu catalysts is unclear because of the challenge in experimentally detecting reaction intermediates formed by the hydrogenation of adsorbed formate (HCOO a ). Thus, the objective of this study is to clarify the reaction mechanism of the CH 3 OH synthesis by establishing the kinetic natures of intermediates formed by the hydrogenation of adsorbed HCOO a on Cu(111). We exposed HCOO a on Cu(111) to atomic hydrogen at low temperatures of 200-250 K and observed the species using infrared reflection absorption (IRA) spectroscopy and temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) studies. In the IRA spectra, a new peak was observed upon the exposure of HCOO a on Cu(111) to atomic hydrogen at 200 K and was assigned to the adsorbed dioxymethylene (H 2 COO a ) species. The intensity of the new peak gradually decreased with heating from 200 to 290 K, whereas the IR peaks representing HCOO a species increased correspondingly. In addition, small amounts of formaldehyde (HCHO), which were formed by the exposure of HCOO a species to atomic hydrogen, were detected in the TPD studies. Therefore, H 2 COO a is formed via hydrogenation by atomic hydrogen, which thermally decomposes at ∼250 K on Cu(111). We propose a potential diagram of the CH 3 OH synthesis via H 2 COO a from CO 2 on Cu surfaces, with the aid of density functional theory calculations and literature data, in which the hydrogenation of bidentate HCOO a to H 2 COO a is potentially the rate-determining step and accounts for the apparent activation energy of the methanol synthesis from CO 2 on Cu surfaces.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- metal organic framework
- aqueous solution
- room temperature
- systematic review
- molecular dynamics
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- machine learning
- magnetic resonance
- biofilm formation
- highly efficient
- mass spectrometry
- climate change
- cystic fibrosis
- carbon dioxide
- electron transfer
- contrast enhanced