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Chemisorbed intermediates reaction order

FT synthesis kinetics are similar on Co and Ru catalysts and reflect similar CO activation and chain growth pathways on these two metals. These kinetic expressions are consistent with the stepwise hydrogenation of surface carbon formed in fast CO dissociation steps (26). Chemisorbed CO and CH t species are the most abundant reactive intermediates, as expected from the high binding energy of CO and carbonaceous deposits on Co and Ru surfaces (7, 76-80). As a result, reaction orders in CO remain negative at the usual inlet pressures but can become positive as CO reactants are depleted by transport limitations within pellets or by high levels of conversion within the catalyst bed. [Pg.233]

The involvement of chemisorbed intermediates in electrocatalytic reactions is manifested in various and complementary ways which may be summarized as follows (i) in the value of the Tafel slope dK/d In i related to the mechanism of the reaction and the rate-determining step (ii) in the value of reaction order of the process (iii) in the pseudocapacitance behavior of the electrode interface (see below), for a given reaction (iv) in the frequency-response behavior in ac impedance spectroscopy (see below) (v) in the response of the reaction to pulse and linear perturbations or in its spontaneous relaxation after polarization (see below) (vi) in certain suitable cases, also to the optical reflectivity behavior, for example, in reflection IR spectroscopy or ellipso-metry (applicable only for processes or conditions where bubble formation is avoided). It should be emphasized that, for any full mechanistic understanding of an electrode process, a number of the above factors should be evaluated complementarily, especially (i), (ii), and (iii) with determination, from (iii), whether the steady-state coverage by the kinetically involved intermediate is small or large. Unfortunately, in many mechanistic works in the literature, the required complementary information has not usually been evaluated, especially (iii) with 6(V) information, so conclusions remained ambiguous. [Pg.26]

Once an organosulfur compound and hydrogen have been chemisorbed on a catalytic surface they must interact with each other in order for desulfurization to be completed therefore, all the major pathways that need to be considered involve hydrogenation of C=C bonds and/or hydrogenolysis of C-S bonds. The intimate details of how such elementary steps occur, and the way in which they are interlinked to form a catalytic cycle are not easy to establish on real operating systems, because of the intrinsic complexity of the catalyst and of the intervening reaction schemes nevertheless, a number of very reasonable mechanistic proposals have been advanced by several research groups on the basis of kinetic studies, detection of intermediates, deuteration experiments, and other appropriate techniques, and the literature on this point is ample. [Pg.18]


See other pages where Chemisorbed intermediates reaction order is mentioned: [Pg.300]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.1995]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.302]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.456]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.642]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.45]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.51 , Pg.52 , Pg.53 , Pg.54 , Pg.55 , Pg.56 ]




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