Atlanta
(September 12, 2005) — Researchers at the Georgia
Institute of Technology have uncovered important evidence
that explains how water, usually an inhibitor of catalytic
reactions, can sometimes promote them. The findings
could lead to fewer constraints on reaction conditions
potentially leading to the development of lower cost
techniques for certain industrially important catalytic
reactions. The results appear in the September 6,
2005 issue of Physical Review Letters.
“Normally, in most catalytic reactions, water can stop the reaction. It kills
the catalyst,” said Uzi Landman, director of the Center for Computational Materials
Science, Regents' and Institute professor and Callaway chair of physics at
Georgia Tech.
And that's a big problem because ensuring that a reaction is water-free can
add to production costs. Many catalytic reactions occur at high temperatures,
which evaporates the water, said Landman. “However, any time that the reaction
temperature is lowered and there's humidity unfavorable effects may occur.
You hope that when you heat the reaction up that the adsorbed water will come
off, but sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes the adsorption of water leads to an
irreversible modification, such as oxidation, and deactivation of the catalyst.
It's poison; it poisons the catalyst,” he said.
In the late 1980's, Japanese scientist Masatake Haruta discovered that
small particles of gold (which is chemically inert in bulk form and normally
not a catalyst) are chemically very reactive. He also found that water can
promote this catalytic activity.
Since the late 1990's, Landman's group has been using advanced quantum
mechanical computational methods to investigate how and why nanoclusters of
gold act as chemical catalysts under dry conditions. This led to certain predictions
that were verified experimentally by Ulrich Heiz's group, who is now at the
Technical University of Munich.
Earlier this year, the two groups co-authored a paper in the journal Science.
It showed theoretical and experimental evidence of the role of charging on
the catalytic activity of gold nanoclusters made of eight atoms when they are
bonded to naturally occurring oxygen vacancy defects on a magnesia surface
that supports the gold. In the recent Physical Review Letters paper, the Georgia
Tech group has made theoretical predictions on how a single water molecule
can catalytically enhance a low-temperature reaction that turns carbon monoxide
into carbon dioxide.
Using computer simulations, Landman and post doctoral fellow Angelo Bongiorno,
found that the water molecule enhances the binding of an oxygen molecule to
an eight atom gold nanocluster, either free or supported on an undefective
magnesia substrate. The water molecule catalytically activates the aforementioned
oxidation reaction of carbon monoxide. In the earlier studies on gold nanoclusters,
defects in the support surface were required to give the gold a slight negative
charge. In this latest study, the presence of a water molecule makes that requirement
unnecessary.
Here's how it works: the structure of the water molecule, H-O-H, is such that
the end with the oxygen atom has a slight negative charge, while the two hydrogen
atoms are positively charged. In the quantum molecular dynamics simulation,
the negatively charged oxygen side of the water molecule bonds to one of the
gold atoms, leaving the positively charged hydrogens of the water molecule
dangling. Subsequently, an oxygen molecule (made of two oxygen atoms) binds
favorably to a neighboring gold atom of the cluster and gets a slight negative
charge in the process.
This results in an adsorbed slightly negatively charged oxygen molecule near
one of the positively charged hydrogen atoms of the adsorbed water molecule.
Since, in chemistry, (as in love) opposites attract, the two get together.
So the oxygen pulls a proton (a positively charged hydrogen) from the water
molecule resulting in formation of a hydroperoxyl (OOH) group and a hydroxyl
(OH).
Now, this relationship can't last because the addition of the hydrogen to the
oxygen molecule to form OOH weakens the bond between the two oxygen atoms.
All it takes to break that bond is a carbon monoxide molecule approaching from
the gas phase, which bonds to one of the oxygens of the OOH to form carbon
dioxide. This leaves the proton to return to the hydroxyl to reform the water
molecule. The product carbon dioxide desorbes readily from the surface, and
the left over oxygen atom stays bonded to the gold. But this single oxygen
atom is very active (as singles often are) and is easily led away when another
carbon monoxide comes along to bond with it to make a second carbon dioxide
molecule.
“This reaction opens the door to a completely new idea; that polar molecules,
like water, or molecules that are good proton donors may show us new channels
of reactivity,” said Landman. “We may be able to take other catalytic reactions
and use water as a promoter under some selective conditions,” added Bongiorno.
“In the future, we want to test the effect of multiple water molecules to see
if there is a limit to how many water molecules can enhance reactions. In this
case, we used magnesium oxide as a substrate. We'd like to know if the effect
limited to that substrate or will it work with others?,” the two researchers
said.
Related Link
Uzi
Landman
http://www.physics.gatech.edu/people/faculty/ulandman.html
For more information contact:
David Terraso, Institute Communications and Public Affairs
Contact David Terraso david.terraso@icpa.gatech.edu
404-385-2966
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