Abstract
Recently, Honda Research USA, Inc. and the University of Kentucky Center for Applied Energy Research researchers showed that Na doping of Pt/ZrO2 catalysts can significantly improve the rate of water-gas shift (WGS). This was attributed to the electronic weakening of the carbon-hydrogen (C-H) bond of formate, with formate being the suggested intermediate of an “associative mechanism.” In this work, we sought to determine (1) how the Na dopant loading affects the steam-assisted formate decomposition and WGS reaction rates and (2) the nature of the electronic effect that weakens the C-H bond of formate as a function of Na dopant loading. We observed that doping Na to up to 1% by weight slightly increased the density of defect-associated bridging hydroxyl groups, which are active sites for producing formate from CO. However, at 2.5% Na, the optimum loading, there was a distinct step-change shift of the band corresponding to C-H stretching of formate to lower wavenumbers, consistent with bond weakening. Pt-carbonyl bands were still able to form at this loading, indicating the availability of Pt sites for dehydrogenating formate during H2O-promoted formate decomposition. At 5% Na loading, while the formate C-H band remained at lower wavenumbers, Pt-carbonyl bands were severely attenuated, indicating a lack of availability of Pt metal sites at the higher loading. Thus, both steam-assisted formate decomposition and low-temperature WGS rates reached maxima at an optimum Na dopant loading of 2.5% Na. The results suggest that the transition state of formate decomposition involves H2O, with Pt assisting by providing a porthole for H2 removal, and with Na exerting a weakening effect on the formate C-H bond. The cleaving of this bond is the proposed rate-determining step of the cycle.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | New Dimensions in Production and Utilization of Hydrogen |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Pages | 143-160 |
Number of pages | 18 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9780128195536 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jan 1 2020 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords
- Alkali doping
- Electronic effect
- Low-temperature water-gas shift (LTS)
- Monoclinic zirconia (m-ZrO)
- Platinum
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
- General Engineering