Issue 18, 2016

Understanding oxidative dehydrogenation of ethane on Co3O4 nanorods from density functional theory

Abstract

Co3O4 is a metal oxide catalyst with weak, tunable M–O bonds promising for catalysis. Here, density functional theory (DFT) is used to study the oxidative dehydrogenation (ODH) of ethane on Co3O4 nanorods based on the preferred surface orientation (111) from the experimental electron-microscopy image. The pathway and energetics of the full catalytic cycle including the first and second C–H bond cleavages, hydroxyl clustering, water formation, and oxygen-site regeneration are determined. We find that both lattice O and Co may participate as active sites in the dehydrogenation, with the lattice-O pathway being favored. We identify the best ethane ODH pathway based on the overall energy profiles of several routes. We identify that water formation from the lattice oxygen has the highest energy barrier and is likely a rate-determining step. This work of the complete catalytic cycle of ethane ODH will allow further study into tuning the surface chemistry of Co3O4 nanorods for high selectivity of alkane ODH reactions.

Graphical abstract: Understanding oxidative dehydrogenation of ethane on Co3O4 nanorods from density functional theory

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Apr 2016
Accepted
20 May 2016
First published
20 May 2016
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Catal. Sci. Technol., 2016,6, 6861-6869

Understanding oxidative dehydrogenation of ethane on Co3O4 nanorods from density functional theory

V. Fung, F. (. Tao and D. Jiang, Catal. Sci. Technol., 2016, 6, 6861 DOI: 10.1039/C6CY00749J

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