Abstract

The structure and catalytic properties of binary dispersed oxide structures prepared by sequential deposition of VO(x) and MoO(x) or VO(x) and CrO(x) on Al(2)O(3) were examined using Raman and UV-visible spectroscopies, the dynamics of stoichiometric reduction in H(2), and the oxidative dehydrogenation of propane. VO(x) domains on Al(2)O(3) modified by an equivalent MoO(x) monolayer led to dispersed binary structures at all surface densities. MoO(x) layers led to higher reactivity for VO(x) domains present at low VO(x) surface densities by replacing V-O-Al structures with more reactive V-O-Mo species. At higher surface densities, V-O-V structures in prevalent polyvanadates were replaced with less reactive V-O-Mo, leading to lower reducibility and oxidative dehydrogenation rates. Raman, reduction, and UV-visible data indicate that polyvanadates predominant on Al(2)O(3) convert to dispersed binary oxide structures when MoO(x) is deposited before or after VO(x) deposition; these structures are less reducible and show higher UV-visible absorption energies than polyvanadate structures on Al(2)O(3). The deposition sequence in binary Mo-V catalysts did not lead to significant differences in structure or catalytic rates, suggesting that the two active oxide components become intimately mixed. The deposition of CrO(x) on Al(2)O(3) led to more reactive VO(x) domains than those deposited on pure Al(2)O(3) at similar VO(x) surface densities. At all surface densities, the replacement of V-O-Al or V-O-V structures with V-O-Cr increased the reducibility and catalytic reactivity of VO(x) domains; it also led to higher propene selectivities via the selective inhibition of secondary C(3)H(6) combustion pathways, prevalent in VO(x)-Al(2)O(3), and of C(3)H(8) combustion routes that lead to low alkene selectivities on CrO(x)-Al(2)O(3). VO(x) and CrO(x) mix significantly during synthesis or thermal treatment to form CrVO(4) domains. The deposition sequence, however, influences catalytic selectivities and reduction rates, suggesting the retention of some of the component deposited last as unmixed domains exposed at catalyst surfaces. These findings suggest that the reduction and catalytic properties of active VO(x) domains can be modified significantly by the formation of binary dispersed structures. VO(x)-CrO(x) structures, in particular, lead to higher oxidative dehydrogenation rates and selectivities than do VO(x) domains present at similar surface densities on pure Al(2)O(3) supports.

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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.