Abstract

The oxidation of ammonia is a key reaction for the production of artificial fertilizers and for environmental protection. Depending on the area of application, the catalytic reaction needs to be tuned toward the production of either N2 or NO, and this selectivity is controlled by temperature, pressure, reactant ratio, and the type of catalyst. PtRh alloys are highly useful catalytic materials for the oxidation of ammonia, and they can be employed at different reaction conditions. In contrast to pure Pt and Rh catalysts, for which a large number of studies of ammonia oxidation reaction mechanism are available, for PtRh alloys, direct spectroscopic evidence for structure–performance relationship is still lacking. To understand the behavior of PtRh alloys, namely, what is their active phase under reaction conditions and how the alloy composition leads to a particular product distribution, we study the oxidation of ammonia over PtRh/Pt(111) surfaces by simultaneous operando ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and mass spectrometry at 1 mbar total reaction pressure. These data are complemented by a catalyst surface characterization by scanning tunneling microscopy in ultrahigh vacuum. We establish that the predominant surface structure during NH3 oxidation strongly depends on the degree of Pt enrichment and the O2/NH3 mixing ratio. At the nanoscale, the selectivity toward N2 or NO production is driven by the surface populations of N and O species. These, in turn, are controlled by the nature of the alloying of Pt with Rh.

Highlights

  • Ammonia oxidation is an essential catalytic reaction used in the production of artificial fertilizers and in environmental applications

  • Here we report an operando ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS) study of ammonia oxidation at 1 mbar and 600 K over several different Rh/

  • From an analysis of the surface species (O, N, NO, and H2O) and gas species (N2, NO, H2O, and N2O) observed in XPS and quadrupole mass spectroscopy (QMS), we address the question of predominant phases of Rh and Pt

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ammonia oxidation is an essential catalytic reaction used in the production of artificial fertilizers and in environmental applications. The intermediate-temperature oxidation of ammonia is essential for NOx abatement, in which environmental catalysis targets N2 as the main product (eq 2).[1] Here, unreacted ammonia from the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) unit is selectively oxidized to N2 (eq 2). This reaction is frequently denoted as the ammonia “slip” oxidation and conducted in a typical O2/NH3 ratio of (99:1). The formation of N2O (eq 3) is undesired for both the described applications

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call