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Below-Room-Temperature C-H Bond Breaking on an Inexpensive Metal Oxide: Methanol to Formaldehyde on CeO2(111).

Jonathan E SuttonThomas DanielsonAriana BesteAditya A Savara
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2017)
Upgrading of primary alcohols by C-H bond breaking currently requires temperatures of >200 °C. In this work, new understanding from simulation of a temperature-programmed reaction study with methanol over a CeO2(111) surface shows C-H bond breaking and the subsequent desorption of formaldehyde, even below room temperature. This is of particular interest because CeO2 is a naturally abundant and inexpensive metal oxide. We combine density functional theory and kinetic Monte Carlo methods to show that the low-temperature C-H bond breaking occurs via disproportionation of adjacent methoxy species. We further show from calculations that the same transition state with comparable activation energy exists for other primary alcohols; with ethanol, 1-propanol, and 1-butanol explicitly calculated. These findings indicate a promising class of transition states to search for in seeking low-temperature C-H bond breaking over inexpensive oxides.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • density functional theory
  • monte carlo
  • ionic liquid
  • molecular dynamics
  • transition metal
  • mental health
  • carbon dioxide
  • solid state