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Nickel catalysts single-crystal planes

Characterization of the Surfaces of Catalysts Measurements of the Density of Surface Faces for High Surface Area Supports. - It has always been a tenet of theories of catalysis that certain reactions will proceed at different rates on different surface planes of the same crystal. Experiments with metal single crystals have vindicated this view by showing that the rate of hydrogenolysis of ethane on a nickel surface will vary from one plane to another. In contrast the rate of methanation remains constant for the same planes.4 Because of this structure sensitivity of catalytic processes there is a requirement for methods of determining the number of each of the different planes which a catalyst and its support may expose at their surfaces. Electron microscopy studies of 5nm Pt particles supported upon graphite show them to be cubo-octahedra with surfaces bound by (111) and (100) planes.5 Similar studies of Pd and Pt prepared by evaporation reveal square pyramids of size 60-200 A bounded by incomplete (111) faces.6... [Pg.46]


See other pages where Nickel catalysts single-crystal planes is mentioned: [Pg.188]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.44]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.144 ]




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Crystal planes

Nickel crystal

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