Issue 104, 2015

Adsorption of aromatics on the (111) surface of PtM and PtM3 (M = Fe, Ni) alloys

Abstract

The adsorption of benzene and phenol was studied on PtM and PtM3 (111) surfaces, with M being either Ni or Fe. Under vacuum, the most favorable near surface structures showed an enrichment in Pt over the M species. An analysis of the electronic structure of the metal species in the clean surfaces with different near surface structures was done with the d-band model and showed that the Pt's d-states are significantly shifted away from the Fermi level due to the Pt–M interactions while the M species' d-states were less affected, with Ni's d-band shifting closer to the Fermi level and Fe's d-band shifting away from the Fermi level. The adsorption of aromatics, benzene and phenol, on several near surface structures for the PtM and PtM3 (111) surfaces showed that higher surface M concentrations resulted in a stronger adsorption due to the larger amount of charge transferred between the adsorbate and surface. However, compared to the adsorption of benzene and phenol on monometallic surfaces, the adsorption of these species on the PtM and PtM3 (111) surfaces was significantly weakened. Overall, our results show that the observed behavior of these Pt/Fe and Pt/Ni alloys is similar to that seen for the previously studied Pd/Fe surfaces. Furthermore, balancing the weakly adsorbing Pt surface species with the more strongly interacting Fe or Ni species can lead to the tailored adsorption of aromatics with applications in both hydrodeoxygenation and hydrogenation reactions by increasing the desorption rate of wanted aromatic products.

Graphical abstract: Adsorption of aromatics on the (111) surface of PtM and PtM3 (M = Fe, Ni) alloys

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Jul 2015
Accepted
18 Sep 2015
First published
18 Sep 2015

RSC Adv., 2015,5, 85705-85719

Author version available

Adsorption of aromatics on the (111) surface of PtM and PtM3 (M = Fe, Ni) alloys

A. J. R. Hensley, S. Schneider, Y. Wang and J. McEwen, RSC Adv., 2015, 5, 85705 DOI: 10.1039/C5RA13578H

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