Mechanistic studies of the water-gas shift reaction over Pt/Ce xZr1-xO2 catalysts: The effect of Pt particle size and Zr Dopant
Date
2012ISSN
2155-5435Source
ACS CatalysisVolume
2Issue
12Pages
2729-2742Google Scholar check
Keyword(s):
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
A series of y wt % Pt/CexZr1-xO2 catalysts (y = 0.1, 0.5, and 1.0 x = 0.3, 0.5, and 0.7) were synthesized and characterized to investigate the effect of CeO2 doping with Zr 4+ and of Pt particle size (Pt/Ce0.5Zr0.5O 2) on important mechanistic and kinetic aspects of the water-gas shift (WGS) reaction. These included the concentration (μmol·g -1 or θ (surface coverage based on Pts)) and chemical structure of active reaction intermediates present in the "carbon path" and "hydrogen path" of the WGS reaction in the 200-300 °C range and the prevailing mechanism among "redox" and "associative formate" largely considered in the literature. Toward this goal, steady-state isotopic transient kinetic analysis coupled with in situ DRIFTS and mass spectrometry experiments were performed for the first time using D2O and 13CO isotopic gases. A novel transient isotopic experiment allowed quantification of the initial transient rate of reaction of adsorbed formate (HCOO-) with water and that of adsorbed CO with water under steady-state WGS reaction conditions. On the basis of these results, it was concluded that formate should not be considered as an important intermediate. It was found that on Pt/CexZr1-xO 2 catalysts, the WGS reaction mechanism switches from "redox" to a combination of "redox" and "associative formate with -OH group regeneration" mechanisms by increasing the reaction temperature from 200 to 300 °C. The superior WGS activity exhibited by Pt/CexZr1-xO2 (x = 0.3, 0.5, and 0.7) catalysts in comparison with Pt/CeO2 was explained by the fact that the site reactivity of Pt across the metal-support interface was increased as a consequence of the introduction of Zr4+ into the ceria lattice. The concentration of active reaction intermediates was found to strongly depend on reaction temperature, support composition (Ce/Zr ratio), and Pt particle size, parameters that all determine the shape of the light-off CO-conversion curve. © 2012 American Chemical Society.