The depth of our understanding in catalysis is governed by the information we have about the number of active sites and their molecular structure. The nature of an active center on the surface of a working heterogeneous catalyst is, however, extremely difficult to identify and precise quantification of active species is generally missing. In metathesis of propene over dispersed molybdenum oxide supported on silica, only 1.5% of all Mo atoms in the catalyst are captured to form the active centers. Here we combine infrared spectroscopy in operando with microcalorimetry and reactivity studies using isotopic labeling to monitor catalyst formation. We show that the active Mo(VI)-alkylidene moieties are generated in situ by surface reaction of grafted molybdenum oxide precursor species with the substrate molecule itself gaining insight into the pathways limiting the number of active centers on the surface of a heterogeneous catalyst. The active site formation involves sequential steps requiring multiple catalyst functions: protonation of propene to surface Mo(VI)-isopropoxide species driven by surface Brønsted acid sites, subsequent oxidation of isopropoxide to acetone in the adsorbed state owing to the red-ox capability of molybdenum leaving naked Mo(IV) sites after desorption of acetone, and oxidative addition of another propene molecule yielding finally the active Mo(VI)-alkylidene species. This view is quite different from the one-step mechanism, which has been accepted in the community for three decades, however, fully consistent with the empirically recognized importance of acidity, reducibility, and strict dehydration of the catalyst. The knowledge acquired in the present work has been successfully implemented for catalyst improvement. Simple heat treatment after the initial propene adsorption doubled the catalytic activity by accelerating the oxidation and desorption-capturing steps, demonstrating the merit of knowledge-based strategies in heterogeneous catalysis. Molecular structure of active Mo(VI)-alkylidene sites derived from surface molybdena is discussed in the context of similarity to the highly active Schrock-type homogeneous catalysts.
The surface of a highly crystalline MoVTeNb oxide catalyst for selective oxidation of propane to acrylic acid composed of the M1 phase has been studied by infrared spectroscopy, microcalorimetry, and in-situ photoelectron spectroscopy. The acid-base properties of the catalyst have been probed by NH3 adsorption showing mainly Brønsted acidity that is weak with respect to concentration and strength of sites. Adsorption of propane on the activated catalyst reveals the presence of a high number of energetically homogeneous propane adsorption sites, which is evidenced by constant differential heat of propane adsorption qdiff,initial=57 kJ mol -1 until the monolayer coverage is reached that corresponds to a surface density of approximately 3 propane molecules per nm 2 at 313 K. The decrease of the heat to qdiff,initial=40 kJ mol -1 after catalysis implies that the surface is restructured under reaction conditions. The changes have been analyzed with high-pressure in-situ XPS while the catalyst was working applying reaction temperatures between 323 and 693 K, different feed compositions containing 0 mol.-% and 40 mol.-% steam and prolonged reaction times. The catalytic performance during the XPS experiments measured by mass spectrometry is in good agreement with studies in fixed bed reactors at atmospheric pressure demonstrating that the XPS results taken under operation show the relevant active surface state. The experiments confirm that the surface composition of the M1 phase differs significantly from the bulk implying that the catalytically active sites are no part of the M1 crystal structure and occur on all terminating planes. Acrylic acid formation correlates with surface depletion in Mo 6+ and enrichment in V 5+ sites. In presence of steam in the feed, the active ensemble for acrylic acid formation appear to consist of V 5+ oxospecies in close vicinity to Te 4+ sites with an element ratio Te/V=1.4. The active sites are formed under propane oxidation conditions and are embedded in a thin layer enriched in V, Te, and Nb on the surface of the structural stable self-supporting M1 phase.
Density functional calculations yield energy barriers for H abstraction by oxygen radical sites in Li-doped MgO that are much smaller (12±6 kJ mol(-1)) than the barriers inferred from different experimental studies (80-160 kJ mol(-1)). This raises further doubts that the Li(+)O(˙-) site is the active site as postulated by Lunsford. From temperature-programmed oxidative coupling reactions of methane (OCM), we conclude that the same sites are responsible for the activation of CH4 on both Li-doped MgO and pure MgO catalysts. For a MgO catalyst prepared by sol-gel synthesis, the activity proved to be very different in the initial phase of the OCM reaction and in the steady state. This was accompanied by substantial morphological changes and restructuring of the terminations as transmission electron microscopy revealed. Further calculations on cluster models showed that CH4 binds heterolytically on Mg(2+)O(2-) sites at steps and corners, and that the homolytic release of methyl radicals into the gas phase will happen only in the presence of O2.
Highly dispersed molybdenum oxide supported on mesoporous silica SBA-15 has been prepared by anion exchange resulting in a series of catalysts with changing Mo densities (0.2-2.5 Mo atoms nm(-2) ). X-ray absorption, UV/Vis, Raman, and IR spectroscopy indicate that doubly anchored tetrahedral dioxo MoO4 units are the major surface species at all loadings. Higher reducibility at loadings close to the monolayer measured by temperature-programmed reduction and a steep increase in the catalytic activity observed in metathesis of propene and oxidative dehydrogenation of propane at 8 % of Mo loading are attributed to frustration of Mo oxide surface species and lateral interactions. Based on DFT calculations, NEXAFS spectra at the O-K-edge at high Mo loadings are explained by distorted MoO4 complexes. Limited availability of anchor silanol groups at high loadings forces the MoO4 groups to form more strained configurations. The occurrence of strain is linked to the increase in reactivity.
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