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Selective decomposition of formic acid on molybdenum carbide: A new reaction pathway

Journal of Catalysis, ISSN: 0021-9517, Vol: 269, Issue: 1, Page: 33-43
2010
  • 56
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 74
    Captures
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Metrics Details

  • Citations
    56
    • Citation Indexes
      56
  • Captures
    74

Article Description

Selective decomposition of formic acid is important as a prototype to study selective bond cleavage of oxygenates. We demonstrate that carbon-modified Mo(1 1 0), C–Mo(1 1 0), is up to 15 times more selective for the dehydrogenation of formic acid than Mo(1 1 0). Reflection absorption infrared spectroscopy (RAIRS) indicates that carbidic carbon blocks active sites for C–O bond cleavage, decreasing the rate of dehydration. Steady-state reactive molecular beam scattering (RMBS) shows that dehydration is the dominant reaction pathway on clean Mo(1 1 0), while C–Mo(1 1 0) selectively promotes dehydrogenation. Kinetic analysis of RMBS data reveals that formic acid dehydrogenation on Mo(1 1 0) has an activation energy of 34.4 ± 3.3 kJ mol −1 while the C–Mo(1 1 0) surface promotes distinct pathways for dehydrogenation with an activation energy of only 12.8 ± 1.0 kJ mol −1. RAIRS spectra suggest the new pathways include the formation of monodentate formate, and at temperatures of 500 K and greater, direct activation of the C–H bond to form carboxyl, both of which decompose via a CO2δ- intermediate to evolve CO 2 and H 2.

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