Disclosing the Reaction Mechanism of CO<sub>2</sub> Hydrogenation to Methanol over CuCeO<sub><i>x</i></sub>/TiO<sub>2</sub>: A Combined Kinetic, Spectroscopic, and Isotopic Study
Tomás Vergara, Daviel Gómez, Bruno Lacerda de Oliveira Campos, Karla Herrera Delgado, Romel Jiménez, Alejandro Karelovic
Abstract
Recent studies have focused on the promotion of methanol synthesis by CeO 2 and the inhibition of the reverse water gas shift reaction (r-WGSR) by TiO 2 support from the perspective of the nature of active sites and morphology. Nevertheless, the rational design of catalysts needs to account additionally for the reaction mechanism, a topic that has not yet been addressed for CuCeO x /TiO 2 . Herein, methanol and CO formation pathways over this catalytic system were unraveled. Kinetic, isotopic, and spectroscopic techniques were combined to obtain mechanistic insights from both reactions. Particularly, H 2 /D 2 kinetic isotopic effect (KIE), gas hourly space velocity (GHSV) effect, cofeeding of products, operando-diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (operando-DRIFTS) under steady-state, transient, and H 2 /D 2 exchange conditions, and 12 CO 2 / 13 CO 2 steady-state isotopic-transient kinetic analysis-DRIFT/mass spectrometry (SSITKA-DRIFTS/MS) were performed. The results unequivocally ruled out an r-WGSR + CO hydrogenation pathway for methanol synthesis and, furthermore, demonstrated that this species is formed through the stepwise hydrogenation of formates over Cu–Ce interfacial sites. Moreover, it was concluded that the formation of CO occurs assisted by hydrogen on a site different from that involved in the methanol synthesis. Likewise, the kinetic relevance of surface-detected carbonate species was discarded. From these mechanistic insights, a formal kinetic model was derived, which accurately fitted the experimental data and correctly predicted the properties of the active sites and the behavior of CuCeO x /TiO 2 catalysts with different CeO 2 concentrations. This study highlights the importance of combining kinetic and spectroscopic analyses with isotopic labeling in order to elucidate reaction mechanisms over catalysts in which the interface between a metal and metal-oxide plays a relevant role.