Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
This work is devoted to understand the effect of K-doping (from K2CO3) on the reducibility, sintering, and
surface properties of Pd metal nanoparticles deposited on a peculiar high surface area SiO2–Al2O3 (SA)
support. The effect of K-doping on the Pd/SA catalyst is systematically investigated by means of several
complementary techniques (TPR, TEM, CO chemisorption and FTIR spectroscopy), trying to separate the
effects of the doping loading (spanning the large 0.25–20.3 K/Pd atomic ratio interval), of the activation
temperature (up to 823 K) and of the activation atmosphere (air or H2). It is shown that the presence of
dopant, already at the lowest loading, causes an important increase of the PdO reduction temperature.
The sulphur poisoning released from the support in the undoped sample during the thermal treatments
in H2 atmosphere is inhibited in the presence of K2CO3. The dramatic loss of metal area measured by CO
chemisorption for samples H2-treated at high temperature is not justified by the small particle sintering
observed by TEM, and is assigned to the progressive particle encapsulation due to the mobilization of the
support by reaction between carbonate and support itself. FTIR spectroscopy of adsorbed CO, allowing to
probe the nature of the Pd surface available for adsorption, confirms the hypothesis.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Pd-supported catalyst; Hydrogenation reactions; Particle size distribution; Metal support interaction; TEM; CO chemisorption; Poisoning
Elenco autori:
R. Pellegrini; G. Leofanti; G. Agostini; L. Bertinetti; S. Bertarione; E. Groppo; A. Zecchina; C. Lamberti
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: