Opposite roles of O-2 in NO- and N2O-carbon reactions: An ab initio study
Data(s) |
01/02/2001
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Resumo |
Previous experimental studies showed that the presence of O-2 greatly enhances NO-carbon reaction while it depresses N2O-carbon reaction on carbon surfaces. A popular explanation for the rate increase is that the addition of O-2 results in a large number of reactive carbon-oxygen complexes, and decomposition of these complexes produces many more active sites. The explanation for the latter is that excess O-2 simply blocks the active sites, thus reducing the rate of N2O-carbon reaction. The contradiction is that O-2 can also occupy active sites in NO-carbon reaction and produce active sites in N2O-carbon reduction. By using ab initio calculation, we find that the opposite roles of O-2 are caused by the different manners of N2O and NO adsorption on the carbon surface. In the presence of excess O-2, most Of the active sites are occupied by oxygen groups. In the competition for the remaining active sites, NO is more likely to chemisorb in the form of NO2 and NO chemisorption is mon thermodynamically favorable than O-2 chemisorption. By contrast, the presence of excess O-2 makes N2O chemisorption much less thermally stable either on the consecutive edge sites or edge sites isolated by semiquinone oxygen. A detailed analysis and discussion of the reaction mechanism of N-2 formation from NO- and N2O-carbon reaction in the presence of O-2 is presented in this paper. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Amer Chemical Soc |
Palavras-Chave | #Chemistry, Physical #Nitric-oxide #Activated Carbons #Catalytic Reduction #Unified Mechanism #Oxygen #Char #Chemisorption #Chemistry #Nitrogen #Model #291804 Nanotechnology #670707 Inorganic industrial chemicals |
Tipo |
Journal Article |