Ethylene Epoxidation on Ag(100), Ag(110), and Ag(111): A Joint Ab Initio and Kinetic Monte Carlo Study and Comparison with Experiments
Journal article, 2019

Ethylene epoxidation is commercially one of the most important selective oxidation reactions. Despite extensive research into different catalytic materials, silver catalysts remain unrivaled in industrial applications, albeit with significant doping. Experiments have already shown that different silver facets exhibit different catalytic performance in terms of turnover frequencies as well as selectivity. In this work, we present extensive first-principles simulations and kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) modeling of the reaction on the three pristine silver surfaces Ag(100), Ag(110), and Ag(111) and on the missing-row reconstructed Ag(110). To better understand the kinetics on different surfaces and veraciously describe the surface coverages, we explicitly take into account the lateral interactions between the adsorbates and their effect on the activation barriers. We show that the most stable Ag(111) surface maintains very low oxygen coverage while being the least active surface and only moderately selective. Ag(100) at high oxygen coverage is, on the other hand, shown to exhibit the highest selectivity. Both pristine and reconstructed Ag(110) surfaces lack any substantial selectivity but are the most active. A comparison with the bulk experimental data shows a good agreement with the modeling data for Ag(111), as this is the most stable facet and thus is expected to be prevalent in catalysts without special treatment. Experimental results on silver nanowires are, however, more consistent with the modeling on Ag(100), which is the main facet therein.

heterogeneous catalysis

ethylene epoxidation

Monte Carlo

DFT

silver

kinetics

Author

Matej Hus

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

Anders Hellman

Chalmers, Physics, Chemical Physics

ACS Catalysis

21555435 (eISSN)

Vol. 9 2 1183-1209

Subject Categories

Inorganic Chemistry

Other Chemical Engineering

Other Physics Topics

Areas of Advance

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

Energy

Materials Science

Infrastructure

C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational Science and Engineering)

DOI

10.1021/acscatal.8b04512

More information

Latest update

4/5/2022 1