2017-12-01T11:50:33Z
2017-12-01T11:50:33Z
2014-06-09
2017-12-01T11:50:33Z
The adsorption and activation of a CO2 molecule on cubic d-MoC(001) and orthorhombic b-Mo2C(001) surfaces have been investigated by means of periodic density functional theory based calculations using the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof exchange-correlation functional and explicitly accounting for (or neglecting) the dispersive force term description as proposed by Grimme. The DFT results indicate that an orthorhombic b-Mo2C(001) Mo-terminated polar surface provokes the spontaneous cleavage of a C-O bond in CO2 and carbon monoxide formation, whereas on a b-Mo2C(001) C-terminated polar surface or on a d-MoC(001) nonpolar surface the CO2 molecule is activated yet the C-O bond prevails. Experimental tests showed that Mo-terminated b-Mo2C(001) easily adsorbs and decomposes the CO2 molecule. This surface is an active catalyst for the hydrogenation of CO2 to methanol and methane. Although MoC does not dissociate C-O bonds on its own, it binds CO2 better than transition metal surfaces and is an active and selective catalyst for the CO2+3H2-> CH3OH + H2O reaction. Our theoretical and experimental results illustrate the tremendous impact that the carbon/metal ratio has on the chemical and catalytic properties of molybdenum carbides. This ratio must be taken into consideration when designing catalysts for the activation and conversion of CO2. .
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Teoria del funcional de densitat; Diòxid de carboni; Hidrogenació; Molibdè; Carburs; Density functionals; Carbon dioxide; Hydrogenation; Molybdenum; Carbides
Royal Society of Chemistry
Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1039/C4CP01943A
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 2014, vol. 16, p. 14912-14921
https://doi.org/10.1039/C4CP01943A
(c) Posada-Perez, Sergio et al., 2014