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Nonthermalized Precursor-Mediated Dissociative Chemisorptionat High Catalysis Temperatures

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Quasiclassical trajectory calculations and vibrational-state-selected beam-surface measurements of CH4 chemisorption on Ir(111) reveal a nonthermal, hot-molecule mechanism for C–H bond activation. Low-energy vibrationally excited molecules become trapped in the physisorption… Click to show full abstract

Quasiclassical trajectory calculations and vibrational-state-selected beam-surface measurements of CH4 chemisorption on Ir(111) reveal a nonthermal, hot-molecule mechanism for C–H bond activation. Low-energy vibrationally excited molecules become trapped in the physisorption well and react before vibrational and translational energies accommodate the surface. The reaction probability is strongly surface-temperature-dependent and arises from the pivotal role of Ir atom thermal motion. In reactive trajectories, the mean outward Ir atom displacement largely exceeds that of the transition-state geometry obtained through a full geometry optimization. The study also highlights a new way for (temporary) surface defects to impact high-temperature heterogeneous catalytic reactivity. Instead of reactants diffusing to and competing for geometrically localized lower barrier sites, transient, thermally activated surface atom displacements deliver low-barrier surface reaction geometries to the physisorbed reactants.

Keywords: nonthermalized precursor; surface; precursor mediated; geometry; mediated dissociative; dissociative chemisorptionat

Journal Title: Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters
Year Published: 2020

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