An experimental study of furan adsorption and decomposition on vicinal palladium surfaces using scanning tunneling microscopy
Abstract
The intact adsorption and decomposition of furan (C4H4O) on vicinal palladium surfaces with (111)-oriented terraces has been studied by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) over a range of temperatures. STM images at 225 K show that furan molecules lie flat and prefer to adsorb at upper step edges. At 225 K, furan molecules adsorbed on "narrow" terraces of 20 to 45 Å in width appear to diffuse more readily than those adsorbed on "wide" terraces of 160 to 220 Å. A distinct population of smaller features appears in STM images on "narrow" terraces at 288 K and on "wide" terraces at 415 K and is identified with the C3H3 decomposition product, agreeing with prior studies which demonstrated that furan dissociates on Pd(111) to yield carbon monoxide (CO) and a C3H3 moiety in the 280 to 320 K range. Based on our direct visualization of this reaction using STM, we propose a spatial mechanism in which adsorption of furan at upper step edges allows catalysis of the dissociation, followed by diffusion of the product to lower step edges.
- Publication:
-
Surface Science
- Pub Date:
- April 2018
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.susc.2017.11.019
- Bibcode:
- 2018SurSc.670...13L
- Keywords:
-
- Furan;
- Palladium;
- Chemisorption;
- Heterogeneous catalysis;
- Scanning tunneling microscopy;
- Vicinal single crystal surfaces