DOI: 10.1126/science.1215864 ISSN:

Isolated Metal Atom Geometries as a Strategy for Selective Heterogeneous Hydrogenations

Georgios Kyriakou, Matthew B. Boucher, April D. Jewell, Emily A. Lewis, Timothy J. Lawton, Ashleigh E. Baber, Heather L. Tierney, Maria Flytzani-Stephanopoulos, E. Charles H. Sykes
  • Multidisciplinary

Tuning Hydrogen Adsorption

Heterogeneous metal catalysts for hydrogenating unsaturated organic compounds need to bind molecular hydrogen strongly enough that it dissociates and forms adsorbed hydrogen atoms, but must not bind these atoms too strongly, or the transfer to the organic molecule will be impeded. Kyriakou et al. (p. 1209 ) examined surface alloy catalysts created when palladium (Pd) atoms are adsorbed on a copper (Cu) surface using scanning tunneling microscopy and desorption techniques under ultrahigh vacuum conditions. The Pd atoms could bind hydrogen dissociatively—which, under these conditions, the Cu surfaces could not—allowing the Cu surface to take up adsorbed hydrogen atoms. These weakly bound hydrogen atoms were able to selectively hydrogenate styrene and acetylene.

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