Operando probing of the surface chemistry during the Haber–Bosch process.

Autor: Goodwin, Christopher M., Lömker, Patrick, Degerman, David, Davies, Bernadette, Shipilin, Mikhail, Garcia-Martinez, Fernando, Koroidov, Sergey, Katja Mathiesen, Jette, Rameshan, Raffael, Rodrigues, Gabriel L. S., Schlueter, Christoph, Amann, Peter, Nilsson, Anders
Zdroj: Nature; Jan2024, Vol. 625 Issue 7994, p282-286, 5p
Abstrakt: The large-scale conversion of N2 and H2 into NH3 (refs. 1,2) over Fe and Ru catalysts3 for fertilizer production occurs through the Haber–Bosch process, which has been considered the most important scientific invention of the twentieth century4. The active component of the catalyst enabling the conversion was variously considered to be the oxide5, nitride2, metallic phase or surface nitride6, and the rate-limiting step has been associated with N2 dissociation7–9, reaction of the adsorbed nitrogen10 and also NH3 desorption11. This range of views reflects that the Haber–Bosch process operates at high temperatures and pressures, whereas surface-sensitive techniques that might differentiate between different mechanistic proposals require vacuum conditions. Mechanistic studies have accordingly long been limited to theoretical calculations12. Here we use X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy—capable of revealing the chemical state of catalytic surfaces and recently adapted to operando investigations13 of methanol14 and Fischer–Tropsch synthesis15—to determine the surface composition of Fe and Ru catalysts during NH3 production at pressures up to 1 bar and temperatures as high as 723 K. We find that, although flat and stepped Fe surfaces and Ru single-crystal surfaces all remain metallic, the latter are almost adsorbate free, whereas Fe catalysts retain a small amount of adsorbed N and develop at lower temperatures high amine (NHx) coverages on the stepped surfaces. These observations indicate that the rate-limiting step on Ru is always N2 dissociation. On Fe catalysts, by contrast and as predicted by theory16, hydrogenation of adsorbed N atoms is less efficient to the extent that the rate-limiting step switches following temperature lowering from N2 dissociation to the hydrogenation of surface species.Using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, the surface composition of iron and ruthenium catalysts during ammonia synthesis at pressures up to 1 bar and temperatures as high as 723 K can be revealed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index