Experimental and Theoretical Study of the Reactions between Small Neutral Iron Oxide Clusters and Carbon Monoxide

被引:159
|
作者
Xue, Wei [1 ,2 ]
Wang, Zhe-Chen [1 ,2 ]
He, Sheng-Gui [1 ]
Xie, Yan [3 ]
Bernstein, Elliot R. [3 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Chem, Beijing Natl Lab Mol Sci, State Key Lab Struct Chem Unstable & Stable Speci, Beijing 100080, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Sci, Grad Sch, Beijing 100080, Peoples R China
[3] Colorado State Univ, Dept Chem, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1021/ja8023093
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Reactions of small neutral iron oxide clusters (FeO1-3 and Fe2O4,5) with carbon monoxide (CO) are investigated by experiments and first-principle calculations. The iron oxide clusters are generated by reaction of laser-ablation-generated iron plasma with O-2 in a supersonic expansion and are reacted with carbon monoxide in a fast flow reactor. Detection of the neutral clusters is through ionization with vacuum UV laser (118 nm) radiation and time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The FeO2 and FeO3 neutral clusters are reactive toward CO, whereas Fe2O4, Fe2O5, and possibly FeO are not reactive. A higher reactivity for FeO2 [sigma(FeO2 + CO) > 3 x 10(-17) cm(2)] than for FeO3 [sigma(FeO3 + CO) similar to 1 x 10(-17) cm(2)] is observed. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations are carried out to interpret the experimental observations and to generate the reaction mechanisms. The reaction pathways with negative or very small overall barriers are identified for CO oxidation by FeO2 and FeO3. The lower reactivity of FeO3 with respect to FeO2 may be related to a spin inversion process present in the reaction of FeO3 with CO. Significant reaction barriers are calculated for the reactions of, FeO and Fe2O4-5 with CO. The DFT results are in good agreement with experimental observations. Molecular-level reaction mechanisms for CO oxidation by O-2, facilitated by condensed phase iron oxides as catalysts, are suggested.
引用
收藏
页码:15879 / 15888
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] REACTIONS BETWEEN SILICON MONOXIDE AND CARBON
    KOZHEVNIKOV, GN
    VODOPYAN.AG
    CHUFAROV, GI
    RUSSIAN METALLURGY, 1972, (04): : 51 - 54
  • [42] Theoretical Study of Small Iron-Oxyhydroxide Clusters and Formation of Ferrihydrite
    Das, Bidisa
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, 2018, 122 (02): : 652 - 661
  • [43] Interaction of carbon monoxide with small metal clusters: a DFT, electrochemical, and FTIR study
    Adams, Brian D.
    Asmussen, Robert M.
    Chen, Aicheng
    Mawhinney, Robert C.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, 2011, 89 (12) : 1445 - 1456
  • [44] A DFT study of hydrogen and carbon monoxide chemisorption onto small gold clusters
    Phala, NS
    Klatt, G
    van Steen, E
    CHEMICAL PHYSICS LETTERS, 2004, 395 (1-3) : 33 - 37
  • [45] Rotational study of carbon monoxide isotopologues in small 4He clusters
    Raston, P. L.
    Xu, Y.
    Jaeger, W.
    Potapov, A. V.
    Surin, L. A.
    Dumesh, B. S.
    Schlemmer, S.
    PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2010, 12 (29) : 8260 - 8267
  • [46] Catalytic reactions on neutral Rh oxide clusters more efficient than on neutral Rh clusters
    Yamada, Akira
    Miyajima, Ken
    Mafune, Fumitaka
    PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2012, 14 (12) : 4188 - 4195
  • [47] Experimental and theoretical studies of neutral MgmCnHx and BemCnHx clusters
    Dong, Feng
    Xie, Yan
    Bernstein, Elliot R.
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2011, 135 (05):
  • [48] Theoretical investigation of gas-phase thermal reactions between carbon monoxide and water
    Hu, SW
    Lü, SM
    Wang, XY
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, 2004, 108 (40): : 8485 - 8494
  • [49] Carbon monoxide adsorption on neutral and cationic vanadium doped gold clusters
    Hai Thuy Le
    Lang, Sandra M.
    De Haeck, Jorg
    Lievens, Peter
    Janssens, Ewald
    PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2012, 14 (26) : 9350 - 9358
  • [50] Size-dependent carbon monoxide adsorption on neutral gold clusters
    Veldeman, N
    Lievens, P
    Andersson, M
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, 2005, 109 (51): : 11793 - 11801