Abstract

We have investigated the most important elementary reaction steps in the steam methane reforming (SMR) process for planar and stepped Pt surfaces (dissociative CH4 adsorption, CHads–Oads recombination, H2O activation) and compared activation barriers for Rh surfaces. Compared to Rh, the lower reactivity of Pt results in (i) higher barriers for dissociative CH4 adsorption and (ii) endothermic formation of OHads and Oads. Microkinetic simulations show that Rh nanoparticle catalysts will be more active than Pt ones. The rate-controlling step is dissociative CH4 adsorption occurring on low-coordinated surface atoms (edges, corners, step-edges). The stepped surfaces are much more reactive than planar surfaces of the corresponding metals. For stepped Pt surfaces, CO formation via recombination of Cads+OHads is favored because of the low Oads coverage. At higher temperatures, deactivation may occur due to poisoning by carbonaceous species because the rate of OHads/Oads formation becomes too low compared to the rate of CHads formation. This occurs at lower temperature for Pt than for Rh because of the lower Pt–O bond energy.

Full Text
Paper version not known

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