1 research outputs found
Toward the Rational Design of More Efficient Mo<sub>2</sub>C Catalysts for Hydrodeoxygenation–Mechanism and Descriptor Identification
Viable alternatives
to scarce and expensive noble-metal-based catalysts
are transition-metal carbides such as Mo and W carbides. It has been
shown that these are active and selective catalysts in the hydrodeoxygenation
of renewable lipid-based feedstocks. However, the reaction mechanism
and the structure–activity relationship of these transition-metal
carbides have not yet been fully clarified. In this work, the reaction
mechanism of butyric acid hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) over molybdenum
carbide (Mo2C) has been studied comprehensively by means
of density functional theory coupled with microkinetic modeling. We
identified the rate-determining step to be butanol dissociation: C4H9*OH + * → C4H9*
+ *OH. Then we further explored the possibility to facilitate this
step upon heteroatom doping and found that Zr- and Nb-doped Mo2C are the most promising catalysts with enhanced HDO catalytic
activity. Linear-scaling relationships were established between the
electronic and geometrical descriptors of the dopants and the catalytic
performance of various doped Mo2C catalysts. It was demonstrated
that descriptors such as dopants’ d-band filling and atomic radius play key roles in governing the catalytic
activity. This fundamental understanding delivers practical strategies
for the rational design of Mo2C-based transition-metal
carbide catalysts with improved HDO performance