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Chemisorption of benzene

The Chemisorption of Benzene R. B. Moves and P. B. Wells The Electronic Theory of Photocatalytic Reactions on Semiconductors Th. Wolkenstein Cycloamyloses as Catalysts David W. Griffiths and Myron L. Bender... [Pg.427]

Few studies have been made of benzene chemisorption by the volumetric method. Zettlemoyer et al. (8) have examined the adsorption of benzene vapor at 0°C on powders of nickel and of copper. First, the monolayer coverage of argon (vm) A, was measured. The argon was then removed by pumping and the amount of benzene required to form a monolayer, (vmi) Bz, was measured. Weakly adsorbed benzene was then removed by pumping, after which further benzene adsorption provided the value (vm2) Bz. Some results are reproduced in Table I. On the assumption that the same extent of surface is accessible both for argon and for benzene adsorption, it is clear that complete monolayers of benzene were not achieved, that some (Ni) or all (Cu) of the benzene was adsorbed reversibly. It was considered that only the irreversibly adsorbed benzene was chemisorbed, the remainder being physically adsorbed. Thus chemisorption of benzene on copper appeared not to occur. The heat of adsorption of benzene on nickel at zero... [Pg.122]

Field electron emission coupled with flash-filament studies have been employed by Condon and Hansen to study benzene chemisorption on tungsten (21). Evidence was obtained for the chemisorption of benzene by a single bond (probably of -character) to the surface. This form of asso-ciatively adsorbed benzene [(I), Scheme 1] appeared to exist in equilibrium with cr-adsorbed-CeHs (II) and adsorbed atomic hydrogen. [Pg.131]

Low-energy electron diffraction has been used by Pitkethly and others to investigate the chemisorption of benzene, at pressures up to 10-7 Torr and at temperatures ranging from ambient to about 500°C, on the (100) (22), (110) (23,24) and (111) (22,24) faces of nickel single crystals. [Pg.131]

Chemisorption of benzene at 297°C on Ni(110) occurred in a rather different manner. Several patterns, some streaked, were observed, and they followed the same sequence and showed the same behavior as those obtained when acetylene was chemisorbed on this surface (29). These structures have not been fully elucidated, but the streaked patterns suggest (i) that the mobility of adsorbed species along the "furrows of the (110) face is easier than their mobility across them, and (ii) that dissociation of the carbon skeleton of benzene and the formation of other structures occurs. [Pg.132]

The conclusions from this work were (i) that the mechanism that operates is of wide applicability, (ii) that exchange proceeds by either the dissociative chemisorption of benzene or by the dissociation of benzene which has previously been associatively chemisorbed, and (iii) that M values of about 2 indicate that further dissociation of surface-area measurements. Surface areas of metal films determined by the chemisorption of hydrogen, oxygen, carbon monoxide, or by physical adsorption of krypton or of xenon concur... [Pg.147]

The articles by J. R. Anderson, J. H. Sinfelt, and R. B. Moyes and P. B. Wells, on the other hand, deal with a classical field, namely hydrocarbons on metals. The pattern of modem wTork here still very much reflects the important role in the academic studies of deuterium exchange reactions and the mechanisms advanced by pioneers like Horiuti and Polanyi, the Farkas brothers, Rideal, Tw igg, H. S. Taylor, and Turkevich. Using this method, Anderson takes ultrathin metal films with their separated crystallites as idealized models for supported metal catalysts. Sinfelt is concerned with hydrogcnolysis on supported metals and relates the activity to the percentage d character of the metallic bond. Moyes and Wells deal with the modes of chemisorption of benzene, drawing on the results of physical techniques and the ideas of the organometallic chemists in their discussions. [Pg.362]

Magnetization, in chemisorption of benzene on metal surfaces, 23 129 Magnetocatalytic effect, 27 23, 26 8 Magnetocrystalline anisotropy, 26 146, 147 Magnetogyric ratio, 42 122 Mahan-Nozi6res-De Dominicis theory, 34 ... [Pg.136]


See other pages where Chemisorption of benzene is mentioned: [Pg.121]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.127]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.124 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.279 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.373 ]




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Benzene chemisorption

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