Abstract
Molybdenum carbide is a promising support to tune the metal reactivity, which originates from the interaction between metal and support. In this work, Pd/β-Mo2C was prepared using a deposition-precipitation method for selective hydrogenation of acetylene. The high temperature calcination is employed to modulate the interaction between Pd and β-Mo2C. The Pd/β-Mo2C catalyst calcined at 600 °C exhibits significant promotion in selective hydrogenation, which shows 100 % acetylene conversion and 81.4 % ethylene selectivity at 160 °C. The activity promotion originates from the enhanced electronic metal-support interaction, which induces a shift of Pd 3d to higher binding energy. Besides, the Pd species become atomically dispersed after calcination. The changes in geometric and electronic structure suppress the formation of Pd hydrides, which consequently inhibits the excessive hydrogenation capacity of Pd. The structure variation also affects the adsorption of ethylene. No strong adsorbed ethylene (di-σ bonded ethylene) can be identified, which is conducive to the improvement of ethylene selectivity. Density functional theoretical (DFT) calculations confirm that Pd on β-Mo2C is positively charged. The desorption energy of C2H4* (0.78 eV) is significantly lower than that of further hydrogenation (1.45 eV), which explains the improved ethylene selectivity of the calcinated catalyst. The present study indicates calcination is an effective method to tune the activity of Pd/β-Mo2C for reactions beyond selective hydrogenation of acetylene.
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