Diversity of adsorbed hydrogen on the TiC (001) surface at high coverages

Publication date

2019-01-31T12:21:45Z

2019-11-15T06:10:18Z

2018-11-15

2019-01-31T12:21:46Z

Abstract

The catalyzed dissociation of molecular hydrogen on the surfaces of diverse materials is currently widely studied due to its importance in a broad range of hydrogenation reactions that convert noxious exhaust products and/or greenhouse gases into added-value greener products such as methanol. In the search for viable replacements for expensive late transition metal catalysts TiC has been increasingly investigated as a potential catalyst for H2 dissociation. Here, we report on a combination of experiments and density functional theory calculations on the well-defined TiC(001) surface revealing that multiple H and H2 species are available on this substrate, with different binding configurations and adsorption energies. Our calculations predict an initial occupancy of H atoms on surface C atom sites, which then enables the subsequent stabilization of H atoms on top of surface Ti atoms. Further H2 can be also molecularly adsorbed over Ti sites. These theoretical predictions are in full accordance with information extracted from X-ray photoemission spectroscopy and temperature-programmed desorption experiments. The experimental results show that at high coverages of hydrogen there is a reconstruction of the TiC(001) surface which facilitates the binding of the adsorbate.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b07340

Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 2018, vol. 122 , num. 49, p. 28013-28020

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b07340

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/676580/EU//NoMaD

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(c) American Chemical Society , 2018

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