Abstract

In this work, well defined alumina and silica supported Pt and PtSn catalysts were prepared by surface organometallic reactions and were characterized by TEM, XPS and EXAFS. These catalysts were tested in the catalytic dehydrogenation of isobutane. XPS results show that tin is found under the form of Sn(0) and Sn(II,IV), being the percentage of Sn(0) lower for alumina supported than for silica supported catalysts. Tin modified platinum catalysts, always show a decrease of approximately 1 eV in the BE of Pt, what would be indicative of an electron charge transfer from tin to platinum. When the concentration of Sn(0) is high enough, in our case Sn(0)/Pt ∼ 0.3, EXAFS experiments demonstrated the existence of a PtSn alloy diluting metallic Pt atoms, for both PtSn/γ-Al 2O 3 and PtSn/SiO 2. This PtSn alloy seems to be not active in the dehydrogenation reaction; however, it is very important for selectivity and stability, inhibiting cracking and coke formation reactions. The ensemble of our catalytic, XPS and EXAFS results, show that bimetallic PtSn/γ-Al 2O 3 catalysts, prepared via SOMC/M techniques, can be submitted to several sequential reaction–regeneration cycles, recovering the same level of initial activity each time and that the nature of the catalytic surface remains practically without modifications.

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