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Hydrogenation and beta-hydride elimination on platinum(111) and nickel/platinum(111) and surface segregation in a palladium-copper alloy

Posted on:2007-03-24Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Carnegie Mellon UniversityCandidate:Ye, PingpingFull Text:PDF
GTID:1451390005987416Subject:Chemistry
Abstract/Summary:
Hydrogenation and dehydrogenation are among the many different elementary reaction steps that alkyl groups undergo during catalytic surface reactions. The kinetics of these elementary steps are influenced by the nature of catalyst surface and dictated by the differences in the energies of the initial state (adsorbed alkyl group) and the transition state to hydrogenation or dehydrogenation. Our study is part of an ongoing program to probe the characteristics of the transition states to elementary surface reactions. The insight developed through understand the nature of the transition states to surface reactions is the key to ultimately understanding the influences of catalytic surfaces on the kinetics of catalytic processes.; Substituent effects have been used to probe the characteristics of the transition states to hydrogenation of alkyl groups on the Pt(111) surface and the transition state to beta-hydride elimination in alkyl groups on the Pt(111) surface. Eight different alkyl and fluoroalkyl groups have been formed on the Pt(111) surface by dissociative adsorption of their respective alkyl and fluoroalkyl iodides. Co-adsorption of hydrogen and subsequent heating of the surface results in hydrogenation of the alkyl groups to alkanes which desorb into the gas phase. The kinetics of the hydrogenation reaction are dependent on the size of the alkyl group (polarizibility) and the degree of fluorination (field effect). The influence of the substituents on the activation barriers to hydrogenation, DE‡H , has been correlated to the field and polarizibility substituent constants of the alkyl groups in the form of a linear free energy relationship. Increasing both the field and polarizibility constants of the alkyl groups increases the barrier to reaction. These substituent effects indicate that the alpha-carbon in the transition state to hydrogenation is cationic with respect to the initial state alkyl group and that the reactant has greater charge density on the alpha-carbon than the transition state.; In the absence of adsorbed hydrogen, alkyl groups on Pt(111) dehydrogenate via beta-hydride elimination. In the case of the fluorinated alkyl groups this then leads to the deposition of hydrogen onto the surface and the hydrogenation of intact fluoroalkyl groups to form fluoroalkanes. The desorption kinetics of the product fluoroalkanes serves as a measure the kinetics of the beta-hydride elimination in alkyl groups on the Pt(111) surface. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)...
Keywords/Search Tags:Surface, Alkyl, Beta-hydride elimination, Hydrogenation, Kinetics, Transition state
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