Activity of CeO x and TiO x Nanoparticles Grown on Au(111) in the Water-Gas Shift Reaction
Brookhaven National Laboratory · Central University of Venezuela
Abstract
The high performance of Au-CeO2 and Au-TiO2 catalysts in the water-gas shift (WGS) reaction (H2O + CO-->H2 + CO2) relies heavily on the direct participation of the oxide in the catalytic process. Although clean Au(111) is not catalytically active for the WGS, gold surfaces that are 20 to 30% covered by ceria or titania nanoparticles have activities comparable to those of good WGS catalysts such as Cu(111) or Cu(100). In TiO(2-x)/Au(111) and CeO(2-x)/Au(111), water dissociates on O vacancies of the oxide nanoparticles, CO adsorbs on Au sites located nearby, and subsequent reaction steps take place at the metal-oxide interface. In these inverse catalysts, the moderate chemical activity of bulk gold is coupled to…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.01
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
6- JAJosé A. RodríguezCorresponding
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Central University of Venezuela
- SMSuli Ma
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Central University of Venezuela
- PLP. Liu
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Central University of Venezuela
- JHJan Hrbek
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Central University of Venezuela
- JPJonathan P. Evans
Brookhaven National Laboratory, Central University of Venezuela
Topics & keywords
- Water-gas shift reaction
- Catalysis
- Oxide
- Nanoparticle
- Water gas
- Metal
- Materials science
- Inorganic chemistry