In Situ and Theoretical Studies for the Dissociation of Water on an Active Ni/CeO 2 Catalyst: Importance of Strong Metal–Support Interactions for the Cleavage of O–H Bonds

Abstract Water dissociation is crucial in many catalytic reactions on oxide‐supported transition‐metal catalysts. Supported by experimental and density‐functional theory results, the effect of the support on OH bond cleavage activity is elucidated for nickel/ceria systems. Ambient‐pressure O 1s pho...

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Published inAngewandte Chemie Vol. 127; no. 13; pp. 3989 - 3993
Main Authors Carrasco, Javier, López‐Durán, David, Liu, Zongyuan, Duchoň, Tomáš, Evans, Jaime, Senanayake, Sanjaya D., Crumlin, Ethan J., Matolín, Vladimir, Rodríguez, José A., Ganduglia‐Pirovano, M. Verónica
Format Journal Article
LanguageGerman
Published 23.03.2015
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Summary:Abstract Water dissociation is crucial in many catalytic reactions on oxide‐supported transition‐metal catalysts. Supported by experimental and density‐functional theory results, the effect of the support on OH bond cleavage activity is elucidated for nickel/ceria systems. Ambient‐pressure O 1s photoemission spectra at low Ni loadings on CeO 2 (111) reveal a substantially larger amount of OH groups as compared to the bare support. Computed activation energy barriers for water dissociation show an enhanced reactivity of Ni adatoms on CeO 2 (111) compared with pyramidal Ni 4 particles with one Ni atom not in contact with the support, and extended Ni(111) surfaces. At the origin of this support effect is the ability of ceria to stabilize oxidized Ni 2+ species by accommodating electrons in localized f‐states. The fast dissociation of water on Ni/CeO 2 has a dramatic effect on the activity and stability of this system as a catalyst for the water‐gas shift and ethanol steam reforming reactions.
ISSN:0044-8249
1521-3757
DOI:10.1002/ange.201410697