Catalysts (Apr 2021)

Study of the Rate-Determining Step of Rh Catalyzed CO<sub>2</sub> Reduction: Insight on the Hydrogen Assisted Molecular Dissociation

  • Mirko Vanzan,
  • Margherita Marsili,
  • Stefano Corni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/catal11050538
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 538

Abstract

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In the context of climate change mitigation, CO2 methanation is an important option for the production of synthetic carbon-neutral fuels and for atmospheric CO2 recycling. While being highly exothermic, this reaction is kinetically unfavorable, requiring a catalyst to be efficiently activated. Recently Rh nanoparticles gained attention as effective photocatalyst, but the rate-determining step of this reaction on Rh surface has not been characterized yet. In this work, Density Functional Theory and Nudged Elastic Band calculations were performed to study the Rh-catalyzed rate-determining step of the CO2 methanation, which concerns the hydrogen assisted cleavage of the CO* molecule and subsequent formation of CH* and O* (* marks adsorbed species), passing through the CHO* key intermediate. The configurations of the various adsorbates on the Rh (100) surface were investigated and the reaction mechanism was studied exploiting different exchange-correlation functionals (PBE, RPBE) and the PBE+U technique. The methanation rate-determining step consists of two subprocesses which subsequently generate and dissociate the CHO* species. The energetics and the dynamics of such processes are extensively studied and described. Interestingly, PBE and PBE+U calculated activation barriers are in good agreement with the available experimental data, while RPBE largely overestimate the CHO* dissociation barrier.

Keywords