Abstract

Unlike for metal catalysts where selective chemisorption probes (H2, O2, CO and N2O) have been successfully applied to count the number of active surface sites and allow determination of TOF values, the analogous situation for oxide catalysts has developed very slowly. The reason for the sluggish development of selective chemisorption probes for oxides is that the same chemisorption probes that work well with metals aren’t compatible with oxides since these chemical probes weakly adsorb on oxides. Methanol, however, is a very reactive molecule that has been found to readily chemisorb on oxides and allows for quantitative determination of the number of active surface sites (Ns). In this mini-review, the determination of the number of active sites by methanol chemisorption is reviewed with examples for pure oxides (one-component oxides), supported oxides (submonolayer, monolayer and above monolayer) and bulk mixed oxides (surface enriched oxide present in submonolayer, monolayer and in excess of monolayer coverages).

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