49 research outputs found

    Controlling Activity and Selectivity Using Water in the Au-Catalysed Preferential Oxidation of CO in H\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3e

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    Industrial hydrogen production through methane steam reforming exceeds 50 million tons annually and accounts for 2–5% of global energy consumption. The hydrogen product, even after processing by the water–gas shift, still typically contains ∼1% CO, which must be removed for many applications. Methanation (CO + 3H2 → CH4 + H2O) is an effective solution to this problem, but consumes 5–15% of the generated hydrogen. The preferential oxidation (PROX) of CO with O2 in hydrogen represents a more-efficient solution. Supported gold nanoparticles, with their high CO-oxidation activity and notoriously low hydrogenation activity, have long been examined as PROX catalysts, but have shown disappointingly low activity and selectivity. Here we show that, under the proper conditions, a commercial Au/Al2O3 catalyst can remove CO to below 10 ppm and still maintain an O2-to-CO2 selectivity of 80–90%. The key to maximizing the catalyst activity and selectivity is to carefully control the feed-flow rate and maintain one to two monolayers of water (a key CO-oxidation co-catalyst) on the catalyst surface

    Trapping of Charged Gold Adatoms by Dimethyl Sulfoxide on a Gold Surface

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    10siWe report the formation of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) molecular complexes on Au(111) enabled by native gold adatoms unusually linking the molecules via a bonding of ionic nature, yielding a mutual stabilization between molecules and adatom(s). DMSO is a widely used polar, aprotic solvent whose interaction with metal surfaces is not fully understood. By combining X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, low temperature scanning tunneling microscopy, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we show that DMSO molecules form complexes made by up to four molecules arranged with adjacent oxygen terminations. DFT calculations reveal that most of the observed structures are accurately reproduced if, and only if, the negatively charged oxygen terminations are linked by one or two positively charged Au adatoms. A similar behavior was previously observed only in nonstoichiometric organic salt layers, fabricated using linkage alkali atoms and strongly electronegative molecules. These findings suggest a motif for anchoring organic adlayers of polar molecules on metal substrates and also provide nanoscale insight into the interaction of DMSO with gold.partially_openembargoed_20160616Feng, Zhijing; Velari, Simone; Cossaro, Albano; Castellarin-Cudia, Carla; Verdini, Alberto; Vesselli, Erik; Dri, Carlo; Peressi, Maria; De Vita, Alessandro; Comelli, GiovanniFeng, Zhijing; Velari, Simone; Cossaro, Albano; Castellarin Cudia, Carla; Verdini, Alberto; Vesselli, Erik; Dri, Carlo; Peressi, Maria; DE VITA, Alessandro; Comelli, Giovann
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