The surface chemistry of nanocrystalline MgO catalysts for FAME production:an in situ XPS study of H2O, CH3OH and CH3OAc adsorption


Autoria(s): Montero, J.M.; Isaacs, M.A.; Lee, A.F.; Lynam, J.M.; Wilson, K.
Data(s)

01/04/2016

Resumo

An in situ XPS study of water, methanol and methyl acetate adsorption over as-synthesised and calcined MgO nanocatalysts is reported with a view to gaining insight into the surface adsorption of key components relevant to fatty acid methyl esters (biodiesel) production during the transesterification of triglycerides with methanol. High temperature calcined NanoMgO-700 adsorbed all three species more readily than the parent material due to the higher density of electron-rich (111) and (110) facets exposed over the larger crystallites. Water and methanol chemisorb over the NanoMgO-700 through the conversion of surface O2 − sites to OH− and coincident creation of Mg-OH or Mg-OCH3 moieties respectively. A model is proposed in which the dissociative chemisorption of methanol occurs preferentially over defect and edge sites of NanoMgO-700, with higher methanol coverages resulting in physisorption over weakly basic (100) facets. Methyl acetate undergoes more complex surface chemistry over NanoMgO-700, with C–H dissociation and ester cleavage forming surface hydroxyl and acetate species even at extremely low coverages, indicative of preferential adsorption at defects. Comparison of C 1s spectra with spent catalysts from tributyrin transesterification suggest that ester hydrolysis plays a key factor in the deactivation of MgO catalysts for biodiesel production.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/26492/1/Surface_chemistry_of_nanocrystalline_MgO_catalysts_for_FAME_production.pdf

Montero, J.M.; Isaacs, M.A.; Lee, A.F.; Lynam, J.M. and Wilson, K. (2016). The surface chemistry of nanocrystalline MgO catalysts for FAME production:an in situ XPS study of H2O, CH3OH and CH3OAc adsorption. Surface science, 646 , pp. 170-178.

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/26492/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed