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Carbon monoxide structure insensitivity

Carbon monoxide adsorbed on sufficiently small palladium particles disproportionates to surface carbon and carbon dioxide. This does not occur on large particles. The CO-O2 reaction is shown to be structure-insensitive provided the metal surface available for the reaction is estimated correctly. [Pg.430]

Carbon monoxide oxidation is a relatively simple reaction, and generally its structurally insensitive nature makes it an ideal model of heterogeneous catalytic reactions. Each of the important mechanistic steps of this reaction, such as reactant adsorption and desorption, surface reaction, and desorption of products, has been studied extensively using modem surface-science techniques.17 The structure insensitivity of this reaction is illustrated in Figure 10.4. Here, carbon dioxide turnover frequencies over Rh(l 11) and Rh(100) surfaces are compared with supported Rh catalysts.3 As with CO hydrogenation on nickel, it is readily apparent that, not only does the choice of surface plane matters, but also the size of the active species.18-21 Studies of this system also indicated that, under the reaction conditions of Figure 10.4, the rhodium surface was covered with CO. This means that the reaction is limited by the desorption of carbon monoxide and the adsorption of oxygen. [Pg.340]


See other pages where Carbon monoxide structure insensitivity is mentioned: [Pg.15]    [Pg.442]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.453]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.240 ]




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