Published September 19, 2023 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Critical step in the HCl oxidation reaction over single-crystalline CeO2−x(111): Peroxo-induced site change of strongly adsorbed surface chlorine

  • 1. Physical Chemistry Department, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 17, 35392 Giessen, Germany
  • 2. Center for Materials Research, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 16, 35392 Giessen, Germany
  • 3. Institute of Catalysis and Petrochemistry, ICP, Spanish National Research Council, CSIC, 28049 Madrid, Spain
  • 4. Combustion Physics, Lund University, Box 118, 22100 Lund, Sweden
  • 5. Synchrotron Radiation Research, Lund University, Box 118, 22100 Lund, Sweden
  • 6. MAX IV Laboratory, Lund University, Box 118, 22100 Lund, Sweden

* Contact person

Description

The catalytic oxidation of HCl by molecular oxygen (Deacon process) over ceria allows the recovery of molecular chlorine from omnipresent HCl waste produced in various industrial processes. In previous density functional theory (DFT) model calculations by Amrute et al. [J. Catal. 2012, 286, 287–297.], it was proposed that the most critical reaction step in this process is the displacement of tightly bound chlorine at a vacant oxygen position on the CeO2(111) surface (Clvac) toward a less strongly bound cerium on-top (Cltop) position. This step is highly endothermic by more than 2 eV. On the basis of a dedicated model study, namely the re-oxidation of a chlorinated single crystalline Clvac-CeO2−x(111)-(√3 × √3)R30° surface structure, we provide in-situ synchrotron-based spectroscopic data (high-resolution core level spectroscopy (HRCLS) and X-ray adsorption near edge structure (XANES)) for this oxygen-induced de-chlorination process. Combined with theoretical evidence from DFT calculations, the Clvac → Cltop displacement reaction is predicted to be induced by an adsorbed peroxo species (O22-), making the displacement step concerted and exothermic by only 0.6 eV with an activation barrier of only 1.04 eV. The peroxo species is shown to be important for the re-oxidation of Clvac-CeO2−x(111) and is considered essential for understanding the function of ceria in oxidation catalysis.

Files

File preview

files_description.md

All files

Files (33.7 MiB)

Name Size
md5:8315ef57f10ef810417599edfbf7dcc2
1.1 KiB Preview Download
md5:eedf9de40726f4cf7a8f1ce1a3d74baf
2.5 MiB Preview Download
md5:6b610aa2562b395eda076651b0daedfa
866.2 KiB Preview Download
md5:9f10b6f937957a45939adcb4847c8859
4.6 MiB Preview Download
md5:2de18506e8f0e4041d4c6c9d0f095bf1
5.9 MiB Preview Download
md5:933108113c3ee54ba5d090a9960c6c62
11.4 MiB Preview Download
md5:bb2726f23121d38d9950c4612130f80a
1.5 MiB Preview Download
md5:2568f41b37f06bfe7bbc08e3eab7f79f
50.3 KiB Preview Download
md5:088759d9f5781cf6cf1a4248830f46c9
1.5 MiB Preview Download
md5:0098d52cb6eacd4c6176cd9cc9e65b7e
5.4 MiB Preview Download
md5:cd0c8c4862421aba19389989f3617e3a
2.9 KiB Preview Download

References

Journal reference (Paper where the data is discussed)
V. Koller, P. Lustemberg, A. Spriewald-Luciano, S. Gericke, A. Larsson, C. Sack, A. Preobrajenski, E. Lundgren, M. V. Ganduglia-Pirovano, H. Over, ACS Catal. 13, 12994−13007 (2023), doi: 10.1021/acscatal.3c03222