Alkali-Metal Promotion of Mass-Selected Metal Sulfide Nanoclusters on Au(111) for CO<sub>2</sub> Activation
ORAL
Abstract
Molybdenum sulfide promoted by alkali (K, Cs) and/or transition (Ni, Co) metals is known to catalyze syngas (CO+H2) to alcohols. The hydrogenation of CO2 to oxygenates on metal sulfides is less well studied, but is of current interest for recycling CO2 into liquid fuels. Recent density functional calculations suggest that alkali-modified Mo6S8 clusters (unsupported) are active for CO2 hydrogenation to methanol. In this work, we are using mass-selected cluster deposition to study the activation of CO2 on K-modified, metal sulfide nanoclusters supported on Au(111). The clusters are prepared by reactive sputtering (3% H2S in Ar) of a metal target (Mo, W), mass-selected by a quadrupole filter and then soft-landed onto an Au(111) crystal. Thermal desorption measurements show that CO2 exposure of the K/Mo6S8/Au(111) surface leads to two distinct CO2 desorption peaks (350 K, 450 K), which are not present for surfaces with only K-atoms or Mo6S8 clusters. Similar experiments were carried out for other Mo and W sulfide clusters. The experimental results are compared with DFT calculations of CO2 binding on the K/Mo6S8/Au(111) surface.
*This work was carried out at Brookhaven National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-SC0012704 with the U.S Department of Energy.
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Presenters
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Meng Xue
- Chemistry, Stony Brook University
- Chemistry , State University of New York at Stony Brook