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Reactions on surfaces

Reactions on surfaces are reactions in which at least one of the steps of the reaction mechanism is the adsorption of one or more reactants. The mechanisms for these reactions, and the rate equations are of extreme importance for heterogeneous catalysis. Via scanning tunneling microscopy, it is possible to observe reactions at the solid gas interface in real space, if the time scale of the reaction is in the correct range.[1][2] Reactions at the solid–gas interface are in some cases related to catalysis.

Simple decomposition edit

If a reaction occurs through these steps:

A + S ⇌ AS → Products

where A is the reactant and S is an adsorption site on the surface and the respective rate constants for the adsorption, desorption and reaction are k1, k−1 and k2, then the global reaction rate is:

 

where:

  • r is the rate, mol·m−2·s−1
  •  is the concentration of adsorbate, mol·m−3
  •   is the surface concentration of occupied sites, mol·m−2
  •   is the concentration of all sites (occupied or not), mol·m−2
  •   is the surface coverage, (i.e.  ) defined as the fraction of sites which are occupied, which is dimensionless
  •   is time, s
  •   is the rate constant for the surface reaction, s−1.
  •  is the rate constant for surface adsorption, m3·mol−1·s−1
  •  is the rate constant for surface desorption, s−1

  is highly related to the total surface area of the adsorbent: the greater the surface area, the more sites and the faster the reaction. This is the reason why heterogeneous catalysts are usually chosen to have great surface areas (in the order of a hundred m2/gram)

If we apply the steady state approximation to AS, then:

  so  

and

 

The result is equivalent to the Michaelis–Menten kinetics of reactions catalyzed at a site on an enzyme. The rate equation is complex, and the reaction order is not clear. In experimental work, usually two extreme cases are looked for in order to prove the mechanism. In them, the rate-determining step can be:

  • Limiting step: adsorption/desorption
 

The order respect to A is 1. Examples of this mechanism are N2O on gold and HI on platinum

  • Limiting step: reaction of adsorbed species
 

The last expression is the Langmuir isotherm for the surface coverage. The adsorption equilibrium constant  , and the numerator and denominator have each been divided by  . The overall reaction rate becomes  .

Depending on the concentration of the reactant the rate changes:

  • Low concentrations, then  , that is to say a first order reaction in component A.
  • High concentration, then  . It is a zeroth order reaction in component A.

Bimolecular reaction edit

Langmuir–Hinshelwood mechanism edit

In this mechanism, suggested by Irving Langmuir in 1921 and further developed by Cyril Hinshelwood in 1926, two molecules adsorb on neighboring sites and the adsorbed molecules undergo a bimolecular reaction:[3]

A + S ⇌ AS
B + S ⇌ BS
AS + BS → Products

The rate constants are now  , , ,  and   for adsorption/desorption of A, adsorption/desorption of B, and reaction. The rate law is:  

Proceeding as before we get  , where   is the fraction of empty sites, so  . Let us assume now that the rate limiting step is the reaction of the adsorbed molecules, which is easily understood: the probability of two adsorbed molecules colliding is low. Then  , with  , which is nothing but Langmuir isotherm for two adsorbed gases, with adsorption constants   and  . Calculating   from   and   we finally get

 .

The rate law is complex and there is no clear order with respect to either reactant, but we can consider different values of the constants, for which it is easy to measure integer orders:

  • Both molecules have low adsorption

That means that  , so  . The order is one with respect to each reactant, and the overall order is two.

  • One molecule has very low adsorption

In this case  , so  . The reaction order is 1 with respect to B. There are two extreme possibilities for the order with respect to A:

  1. At low concentrations of A,  , and the order is one with respect to A.
  2. At high concentrations,  . The order is minus one with respect to A. The higher the concentration of A, the slower the reaction goes, in this case we say that A inhibits the reaction.
  • One molecule has very high adsorption

One of the reactants has very high adsorption and the other one doesn't adsorb strongly.

 , so  . The reaction order is 1 with respect to B and −1 with respect to A. Reactant A inhibits the reaction at all concentrations.

The following reactions follow a Langmuir–Hinshelwood mechanism:[4]

Eley–Rideal mechanism edit

In this mechanism, proposed in 1938 by D. D. Eley and E. K. Rideal, only one of the molecules adsorbs and the other one reacts with it directly from the gas phase, without adsorbing ("nonthermal surface reaction"):

A(g) + S(s) ⇌ AS(s)
AS(s) + B(g) → Products

Constants are   and   and rate equation is  . Applying steady state approximation to AS and proceeding as before (considering the reaction the limiting step once more) we get  . The order is one with respect to B. There are two possibilities, depending on the concentration of reactant A:

  • At low concentrations of A,  , and the order is one with respect to A.
  • At high concentrations of A,  , and the order is zero with respect to A.

The following reactions follow an Eley–Rideal mechanism:[4]

  • C2H4 + ½ O2 (adsorbed) → (CH2CH2)O The dissociative adsorption of oxygen is also possible, which leads to secondary products carbon dioxide and water.
  • CO2 + H2 (ads.) → H2O + CO
  • 2 NH3 + 1½ O2 (ads.) → N2 + 3H2O on a platinum catalyst
  • C2H2 + H2 (ads.) → C2H4 on nickel or iron catalysts

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wintterlin, J.; Völkening, S.; Janssens, T. V. W.; Zambelli, T.; Ertl, G. (1997). "Atomic and Macroscopic Reaction Rates of a Surface-Catalyzed Reaction". Science. 278: 1931–4. Bibcode:1997Sci...278.1931W. doi:10.1126/science.278.5345.1931. PMID 9395392.
  2. ^ Waldmann, T.; et al. (2012). "Oxidation of an Organic Adlayer: A Bird's Eye View". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 134: 8817–8822. doi:10.1021/ja302593v. PMID 22571820.
  3. ^ Keith J. Laidler and John H. Meiser Physical Chemistry (Benjamin/Cummings 1982) p.780 ISBN 0-8053-5682-7
  4. ^ a b Grolmuss, Alexander. "A 7: Mechanismen in der heterogenen Katalyse" [A7: Mechanisms in Heterogeneous Catalysis] (in German).
  • Graphic models of Eley Rideal and Langmuir Hinshelwood mechanisms

reactions, surfaces, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Reactions on surfaces news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Reactions on surfaces are reactions in which at least one of the steps of the reaction mechanism is the adsorption of one or more reactants The mechanisms for these reactions and the rate equations are of extreme importance for heterogeneous catalysis Via scanning tunneling microscopy it is possible to observe reactions at the solid gas interface in real space if the time scale of the reaction is in the correct range 1 2 Reactions at the solid gas interface are in some cases related to catalysis Contents 1 Simple decomposition 2 Bimolecular reaction 2 1 Langmuir Hinshelwood mechanism 2 2 Eley Rideal mechanism 3 See also 4 ReferencesSimple decomposition editIf a reaction occurs through these steps A S AS Productswhere A is the reactant and S is an adsorption site on the surface and the respective rate constants for the adsorption desorption and reaction are k1 k 1 and k2 then the global reaction rate is r k2CAS k28CS displaystyle r k 2 C mathrm AS k 2 theta C mathrm S nbsp where r is the rate mol m 2 s 1 CA displaystyle C A nbsp is the concentration of adsorbate mol m 3 CAS displaystyle C mathrm AS nbsp is the surface concentration of occupied sites mol m 2 CS displaystyle C mathrm S nbsp is the concentration of all sites occupied or not mol m 2 8 displaystyle theta nbsp is the surface coverage i e CAS CS displaystyle C AS C S nbsp defined as the fraction of sites which are occupied which is dimensionless t displaystyle t nbsp is time s k2 displaystyle k 2 nbsp is the rate constant for the surface reaction s 1 k1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp is the rate constant for surface adsorption m3 mol 1 s 1 k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp is the rate constant for surface desorption s 1CS displaystyle C mathrm S nbsp is highly related to the total surface area of the adsorbent the greater the surface area the more sites and the faster the reaction This is the reason why heterogeneous catalysts are usually chosen to have great surface areas in the order of a hundred m2 gram If we apply the steady state approximation to AS then dCASdt 0 k1CACS 1 8 k28CS k 18CS displaystyle frac dC mathrm AS dt 0 k 1 C mathrm A C mathrm S 1 theta k 2 theta C mathrm S k 1 theta C mathrm S nbsp so 8 k1CAk1CA k 1 k2 displaystyle theta frac k 1 C mathrm A k 1 C mathrm A k 1 k 2 nbsp and r k1k2CACSk1CA k 1 k2 displaystyle r frac k 1 k 2 C mathrm A C mathrm S k 1 C mathrm A k 1 k 2 nbsp The result is equivalent to the Michaelis Menten kinetics of reactions catalyzed at a site on an enzyme The rate equation is complex and the reaction order is not clear In experimental work usually two extreme cases are looked for in order to prove the mechanism In them the rate determining step can be Limiting step adsorption desorptionk2 k1CA k 1 so r k1CACS displaystyle k 2 gg k 1 C mathrm A k 1 text so r approx k 1 C mathrm A C mathrm S nbsp The order respect to A is 1 Examples of this mechanism are N2O on gold and HI on platinum Limiting step reaction of adsorbed speciesk2 k1CA k 1 so 8 k1CAk1CA k 1 K1CAK1CA 1 displaystyle k 2 ll k 1 C mathrm A k 1 text so theta frac k 1 C mathrm A k 1 C mathrm A k 1 frac K 1 C mathrm A K 1 C mathrm A 1 nbsp The last expression is the Langmuir isotherm for the surface coverage The adsorption equilibrium constant K1 k1k 1 displaystyle K 1 frac k 1 k 1 nbsp and the numerator and denominator have each been divided by k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp The overall reaction rate becomes r K1k2CACSK1CA 1 displaystyle r frac K 1 k 2 C mathrm A C mathrm S K 1 C mathrm A 1 nbsp Depending on the concentration of the reactant the rate changes Low concentrations then r K1k2CACS displaystyle r K 1 k 2 C mathrm A C mathrm S nbsp that is to say a first order reaction in component A High concentration then r k2CS displaystyle r k 2 C mathrm S nbsp It is a zeroth order reaction in component A Bimolecular reaction editLangmuir Hinshelwood mechanism edit In this mechanism suggested by Irving Langmuir in 1921 and further developed by Cyril Hinshelwood in 1926 two molecules adsorb on neighboring sites and the adsorbed molecules undergo a bimolecular reaction 3 A S ASB S BSAS BS ProductsThe rate constants are now k1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp k 1 displaystyle k 1 nbsp k2 displaystyle k 2 nbsp k 2 displaystyle k 2 nbsp and k displaystyle k nbsp for adsorption desorption of A adsorption desorption of B and reaction The rate law is r k8A8BCS2 displaystyle r k theta mathrm A theta mathrm B C mathrm S 2 nbsp Proceeding as before we get 8A k1CA8Ek 1 kCS8B displaystyle theta mathrm A frac k 1 C mathrm A theta E k 1 kC mathrm S theta mathrm B nbsp where 8E displaystyle theta E nbsp is the fraction of empty sites so 8A 8B 8E 1 displaystyle theta mathrm A theta mathrm B theta E 1 nbsp Let us assume now that the rate limiting step is the reaction of the adsorbed molecules which is easily understood the probability of two adsorbed molecules colliding is low Then 8A K1CA8E displaystyle theta mathrm A K 1 C mathrm A theta E nbsp with Ki ki k i displaystyle K i k i k i nbsp which is nothing but Langmuir isotherm for two adsorbed gases with adsorption constants K1 displaystyle K 1 nbsp and K2 displaystyle K 2 nbsp Calculating 8E displaystyle theta E nbsp from 8A displaystyle theta mathrm A nbsp and 8B displaystyle theta mathrm B nbsp we finally get r kCS2K1K2CACB 1 K1CA K2CB 2 displaystyle r kC mathrm S 2 frac K 1 K 2 C mathrm A C mathrm B 1 K 1 C mathrm A K 2 C mathrm B 2 nbsp dd The rate law is complex and there is no clear order with respect to either reactant but we can consider different values of the constants for which it is easy to measure integer orders Both molecules have low adsorptionThat means that 1 K1CA K2CB displaystyle 1 gg K 1 C mathrm A K 2 C mathrm B nbsp so r kCS2K1K2CACB displaystyle r kC mathrm S 2 K 1 K 2 C mathrm A C mathrm B nbsp The order is one with respect to each reactant and the overall order is two One molecule has very low adsorptionIn this case K1CA 1 K2CB displaystyle K 1 C mathrm A 1 gg K 2 C mathrm B nbsp so r kCS2K1K2CACB 1 K1CA 2 displaystyle r kC mathrm S 2 frac K 1 K 2 C mathrm A C mathrm B 1 K 1 C mathrm A 2 nbsp The reaction order is 1 with respect to B There are two extreme possibilities for the order with respect to A At low concentrations of A r kCS2K1K2CACB displaystyle r kC mathrm S 2 K 1 K 2 C mathrm A C mathrm B nbsp and the order is one with respect to A At high concentrations r kCS2K2CBK1CA displaystyle r kC mathrm S 2 frac K 2 C mathrm B K 1 C mathrm A nbsp The order is minus one with respect to A The higher the concentration of A the slower the reaction goes in this case we say that A inhibits the reaction One molecule has very high adsorptionOne of the reactants has very high adsorption and the other one doesn t adsorb strongly K1CA 1 K2CB displaystyle K 1 C mathrm A gg 1 K 2 C mathrm B nbsp so r kCS2K2CBK1CA displaystyle r kC mathrm S 2 frac K 2 C mathrm B K 1 C mathrm A nbsp The reaction order is 1 with respect to B and 1 with respect to A Reactant A inhibits the reaction at all concentrations The following reactions follow a Langmuir Hinshelwood mechanism 4 2 CO O2 2 CO2 on a platinum catalyst CO 2H2 CH3OH on a ZnO catalyst C2H4 H2 C2H6 on a copper catalyst N2O H2 N2 H2O on a platinum catalyst C2H4 O2 CH3CHO on a palladium catalyst CO OH CO2 H e on a platinum catalyst Eley Rideal mechanism edit In this mechanism proposed in 1938 by D D Eley and E K Rideal only one of the molecules adsorbs and the other one reacts with it directly from the gas phase without adsorbing nonthermal surface reaction A g S s AS s AS s B g ProductsConstants are k1 k 1 displaystyle k 1 k 1 nbsp and k displaystyle k nbsp and rate equation is r kCS8ACB displaystyle r kC mathrm S theta mathrm A C mathrm B nbsp Applying steady state approximation to AS and proceeding as before considering the reaction the limiting step once more we get r kCSCBK1CAK1CA 1 displaystyle r kC mathrm S C mathrm B frac K 1 C mathrm A K 1 C mathrm A 1 nbsp The order is one with respect to B There are two possibilities depending on the concentration of reactant A At low concentrations of A r kCSK1CACB displaystyle r kC mathrm S K 1 C mathrm A C mathrm B nbsp and the order is one with respect to A At high concentrations of A r kCSCB displaystyle r kC mathrm S C mathrm B nbsp and the order is zero with respect to A The following reactions follow an Eley Rideal mechanism 4 C2H4 O2 adsorbed CH2CH2 O The dissociative adsorption of oxygen is also possible which leads to secondary products carbon dioxide and water CO2 H2 ads H2O CO 2 NH3 1 O2 ads N2 3H2O on a platinum catalyst C2H2 H2 ads C2H4 on nickel or iron catalystsSee also editDiffusion controlled reactionReferences edit Wintterlin J Volkening S Janssens T V W Zambelli T Ertl G 1997 Atomic and Macroscopic Reaction Rates of a Surface Catalyzed Reaction Science 278 1931 4 Bibcode 1997Sci 278 1931W doi 10 1126 science 278 5345 1931 PMID 9395392 Waldmann T et al 2012 Oxidation of an Organic Adlayer A Bird s Eye View Journal of the American Chemical Society 134 8817 8822 doi 10 1021 ja302593v PMID 22571820 Keith J Laidler and John H Meiser Physical Chemistry Benjamin Cummings 1982 p 780 ISBN 0 8053 5682 7 a b Grolmuss Alexander A 7 Mechanismen in der heterogenen Katalyse A7 Mechanisms in Heterogeneous Catalysis in German Graphic models of Eley Rideal and Langmuir Hinshelwood mechanisms Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reactions on surfaces amp oldid 1124888251, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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