Abstract

Molybdenum oxide-based catalysts are widely used for the ammoxidation of toluene, methanation of CO, or hydrodeoxygenation. As a first step towards a gas-phase model system, we investigate here structural properties of mass-selected [Mo4O13]2−, [HMo4O13]−, and [CH3Mo4O13]− by a combination of collision-induced dissociation (CID) experiments and quantum chemical calculations. According to calculations, the common structural motif is an eight-membered ring composed of four MoO2 units and four O atoms. The 13th O atom is located above the center of the ring and connects two to four Mo centers. For [Mo4O13]2− and [HMo4O13]−, dissociation requires opening or rearrangement of the ring structure, which is quite facile for the doubly charged [Mo4O13]2−, but energetically more demanding for [HMo4O13]−. In the latter case, the hydrogen atom is found to stay preferentially with the negatively charged fragments [HMo2O7]− or [HMoO4]−. The doubly charged species [Mo4O13]2− loses one MoO3 unit at low energies while Coulomb explosion into the complementary fragments [Mo2O6]− and [Mo2O7]− dominates at elevated collision energies. [CH3Mo4O13]− affords rearrangements of the methyl group with low barriers, preferentially eliminating formaldehyde, while the ring structure remains intact. [CH3Mo4O13]− also reacts efficiently with water, leading to methanol or formaldehyde elimination.

Highlights

  • Molybdenum oxide-based catalysts are widely applicable in heterogeneous catalysis, e.g., for ammoxidation of toluene [1], hydrodeoxygenation [2, 3], or sulfur-resistant CO methanation [4]

  • From electrospray ionization of heptamolybdate dissolved in water-methanol (1:1), we obtained predominantly [Mo4O13]2−, [HMo4O13]−, and [CH3Mo4O13]−

  • As molybdenum oxides are protonated in the presence of alcohols [16], protonated [HMo4O13]− is formed in solution

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Summary

Introduction

Molybdenum oxide-based catalysts are widely applicable in heterogeneous catalysis, e.g., for ammoxidation of toluene [1], hydrodeoxygenation [2, 3], or sulfur-resistant CO methanation [4]. We study the properties of the pure [Mo4O13]2− cluster as well as its protonated [HMo4O13]− and methylated [CH3Mo4O13]− forms in the gas phase using mass spectrometry. All employed DFT functionals (ωB97XD, B3LYP, M06) predict the lowest energy structure for [Mo3O10]2− to be the linear isomer IIa, in agreement with previous calculations [24], further indicating that ring opening takes place.

Results
Conclusion

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