Interaction of methanol over CsCl- and KCl-doped η-alumina and the attenuation of dimethyl ether formation

McInroy, A. R., Winfield, J. M., Dudman, C. C., Jones, P. and Lennon, D. (2022) Interaction of methanol over CsCl- and KCl-doped η-alumina and the attenuation of dimethyl ether formation. Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 126(25), pp. 10237-10620. (doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.2c02275) (PMID:35800675)

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Abstract

As part of a program to investigate aspects of surface chemistry relevant to methyl chloride synthesis catalysis, the interaction of methanol with η-alumina doped with either CsCl or KCl in the range 0.01–1.0 mmol g(cat)–1 is investigated by a combination of diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy and temperature-programed desorption (TPD). Infrared spectra (IR) recorded at 293 K show that increasing the concentration of the group 1 metal chloride progressively decreases the surface concentration of associatively chemisorbed methanol and changes the environment in which the adsorbed methanol resides. For CsCl concentrations of ≥0.6 mmol g(cat)–1, chemisorbed methoxy species dominate the IR spectrum, while TPD studies show that the amount of methanol adsorbed onto the surface, and subsequently desorbed unchanged, changes relatively little. In the TPD experiments, some of the adsorbed methanol reacts to give dimethyl ether (DME) which then desorbs; for dopant concentrations of 1.0 mmol g(cat)–1, DME formation is suppressed to below the limit of detection. Unexpectedly, the presence of formate species generated at 293 K is also observed spectroscopically, characterized by a νasym(COO) mode which exhibits a hypsochromic shift relative to potassium formate; surface concentrations of formate are higher at higher loadings of group 1 metal chloride. Temperature-programed IR spectroscopy shows that the room-temperature formate species desorbs, decomposes, or migrates on warming to 653 K. Thermal ramping of the methanol-saturated surface also results in formate production but one that exhibits an IR profile in agreement with earlier observations and literature values. Increasing the concentrations of the group 1 metal chloride progressively decreases the presence of the thermally induced formate moiety. The study not only reinforces the concept of group 1 metal chloride additives progressively rendering ineffective those Lewis acid sites present at the η-alumina surface which convey discrete reaction characteristics [e.g., (i) dimerization of methanol to form DME and (ii) an activated methoxy → formate transition] but also suggests the generation of reactive sites not present in the undoped alumina.

Item Type:Articles
Additional Information:The EPSRC (grant number GR/P01984/01) and Ineos Chlor are thanked for project support and the provision of an Industrial CASE studentship (ARM).
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Lennon, Professor David and Winfield, Professor John
Authors: McInroy, A. R., Winfield, J. M., Dudman, C. C., Jones, P., and Lennon, D.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Chemistry
Journal Name:Journal of Physical Chemistry C
Publisher:American Chemical Society
ISSN:1932-7447
ISSN (Online):1932-7455
Published Online:16 June 2022
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2022 The Authors
First Published:First published in Journal of Physical Chemistry C 126(25): 10378–10387
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence

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