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Surface Chemistry and Catalysis Dr. Mothi Krishna Mohan Assistant Professor Dept. of Sciences and Humanities Christ University, Bangalore 1 Surface Chemistry Surface chemistry can be roughly defined as the study of chemical reactions at interfaces. Surface science is the study of chemical and physical phenomena that occur at the interface of two phases. It is closely related to surface engineering, which aims at modifying the Chemical composition of a surface by incorporation of selected elements or functional groups that produce various desired effects or improvements in the properties of the surface or interface. 2 Objectives Adsorption Adsorption versus absorption Types of adsorption: physisorption and chemisorption Desorption Adsorption isotherms: Freundlich, Langmuir and BET Types of Adsorption Isotherm Adsorption isobar 3 Adsorption The phenomenon of higher concentration of any molecular species at the surface than in the bulk of the solid is known as Adsorption. The major forces involved are intermolecular forces (Van der Waals forces) Reasons behind Adsorption Unbalanced or residual forces, Extra valencies, Imperfections or defects, Sometimes attracts more substances to the surface than in the bulk. 4 Terms used in Surface Chemistry Adsorption : Higher concentration of substances on the surface. Absorption : Uniform distribution of substance throughout the body of a solid or liquid. Sorption : Process in which both adsorption and absorption take place simultaneously. Adsorbent : The solid that takes up gases, solute from solution are called adsorbent. Adsorbate : The substance that gets adsorbed is known as adsorbate. Desorption : The process of removal of an adsorbed substance from the surface on which it is adsorbed 5 Adsorption Vs Absorption H2O on Activated carbon : Adsorption H2O in CaCl2 : Absorption NH3 on Charcoal : Adsoption NH3 in H2O : Absorption 6 H H H H H H H H H H2 adsorption on palladium Surface Process H H H H H HH H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H2 absorption palladium hydride Bulk Process 7 Adsorption is not necessarily a physical phenomenon always. It may as well as be chemical process involving chemical interaction between the surface atoms of the adsorbent and the atoms of the adsorbate. Eg: Chemisorption of Oxygen by Carbon Chemisorption of Hydrogen by Nickel In both the cases suitable surface compound, frequently referred to as Surface complex results. 8 Types of Adsorption Positive Adsorption : Higher concentration of Adsorbate on the surface than in the bulk. Negative Adsorption : Lesser concentration of Adsorbate on the surface than in the bulk. Physical Adsorption : Physical forces are involved. Chemical Adsorption : Chemical forces are involved. 9 Characteristics of Adsorption Adsorption is accompanied by decrease in the ΔG (free energy) of the system when ΔG = 0 adsorption equilibrium is said to be established. Adsorption is invariably accompanied by evolution of heat ie. It is an exothermic process. In other words ΔH of adsorption is always negative. When a gas is adsorbed, the freedom of movement of its molecules become restricted. On account of this there is a decrease in entropy after adsorption ie. ΔS is negative. According to Gibb’s Helmholtz Equation (ΔG = ΔH – TΔS), Adsorption is a spontaneous reaction (Thermodynamically more favourable). 10 Molar Enthalpy of Adsorption The amount of heat evolved when one mole of a gas or vapor is adsorbed on a solid material is known as Molar Enthalpy of Adsorption 11 Chemisorption Vs Physisorption Physisorption Chemisorption Physisorption occurs only at very low temperatures falling below the boiling point of the adsorbate. Physisorption decreases with rise in temperature Can occur at all the temperatures. The magnitude of Chemisorption increases with rise in temperature. This is just as the magnitude of chemical reaction in a given time increases with rise in temperature 12 The heat evolved in The heat evolved in physisorption is quite low, chemisorption is very high, varying generally between 4-40 varying generally between KJ/mol. 40-400 KJ/mol. Reversible Irreversible Favors multilayer adsorption Favors monolayer adsorption Forces of attraction are Vander Wall’s forces It does not require any Ea Forces of attraction are chemical forces It requires high Ea It is not very specific It is very much specific 13 Applications of Adsorption One of the effective methods to create high vacuum with the help of Charcoal. Activated charcoal is used in gas masks in which all the toxic gases and vapors are adsorbed by the charcoal. Silica and Alumina gels are used as adsorbents for removing moisture and for controlling humidities of rooms. Animal charcoal id used as a decoloriser in the manufacture of cane sugar. It plays an important role in heterogeneous catalysis. 14 Factors Influencing Adsorption Surface Area Adsorption being a surface phenomenon, Increase in the surface area of the adsorbent, increases the total amount of gas adsorbed. Thus finely divided metals (nickel, platinum) and porous substances (Charcoal, silica gel) provides large surface area and are best solid adsorbents. Effect of Temperature and Pressure The process of adsorption is an exothermic process. According to Le-Chatlier’s principle, the magnitude of adsorption should increase with decrease in temperature. Infact it is found to be so in case of physical adsorption because vanderwaal’s forces are strong at low temperatures. However, the chemisorption first increases with rise in temperature and then starts decreasing. The initial increase shows that like chemical reactions, chemisorption also needs activation energy. 15 Adsorption Isobars 16 The magnitude of adsorption increases with increase in pressure. 17 Nature of the Gas More readly soluble and easily liquefiable gases such as Ammonia, HCl, Cl2 and SO2 are adsorbed more effectively than the so called permanent gases such as H2, N2 and O2. The Van der Walls or inter molecular forces which are involved in adsorption are more predominant in the former category than in the latter category of gases. 18 Determination of Extend of Adsorption The gas is contained in a vessel of known volume at a given temperature. The pressure of the gas can be measured with the help of a manometer. Then an adsorbent is introduced into the vessel by a suitable device. Adsorption takes place fairly quickly and the pressure of the gas falls. This is Noted on the manometer. Knowing the fall of pressure, the quantity of gas adsorbed by the solid can be calculated, assuming Boyle’s law to hold good. 19 Desorption Activation Energy Since the adsorbed molecule has a low binding energy, it may easily shake off from the surface. That is the molecule will remain on the surface for a very short time before it is desorbed. The rate constant Follows Arrhenius-type relation kdesorption = A𝒆−𝑬𝒂/𝑹𝑻 Hence 1/kdesorption is called the life time τ τ = τ0 𝒆𝑬𝒂/𝑹𝑻 20 Freundlich Adsorption Isotherm A graph between the amount (x/m) adsorbed by an adsorbent and the equilibrium pressure of the adsorbate at constant temperature is called adsorption isotherm At low pressure graph is nearly a straight line. x/m = kpn x/m is the amount of gas adsorbed k and n are constants Here n is always less than one and therefore x/m does not increase as rapidly as p 21 Langmuir Isotherm Considered adsorption of Gases on the surface of a solid Assumptions 1. The surface of solid to be made up of elementary sites each of which could adsorb one gas molecule. 2. All the adsorption sites are equivalent and the ability of the gas molecule to get bound to any one site is independent of whether or not the neighboring sites are occupied. 3. There is a dynamic equilibrium exist between the adsorbed molecule and free molecule. Suppose if A is the gas molecule and M is the surface site , then ka A(g) + M(surface) kd AM 22 Where ka and kd are the rate constants for adsorption and desorption respectively. The rate of adsorption is proportional to pressure of A ie PA and the number of vacant sites on the surface ie. N(1-θ) where N is the total number of sites and θ is the fraction of total sites occupied by The gas molecule. Θ= 𝐍𝐮𝐦𝐛𝐞𝐫 𝐨𝐟 𝐚𝐝𝐬𝐨𝐫𝐩𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 𝐬𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐬 𝐨𝐜𝐜𝐮𝐩𝐢𝐞𝐝 𝐍𝐮𝐦𝐛𝐞𝐫 𝐨𝐟 𝐚𝐝𝐬𝐨𝐫𝐩𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 𝐬𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐬 𝐚𝐯𝐚𝐢𝐥𝐚𝐛𝐥𝐞 The rate of Adsorption = ka PA N(1-θ)……(a) Rate of desorption is proportional to the number of adsorbed molecule, Nθ. The rate of Desorption = kd N θ……(b) 23 Since at equilibrium, the rate of adsorption is equal to rate of desorption, Then we can write from equations (a) and (b), Ka pA N(1-θ) = kd N θ…..(c) Where K = 𝐤𝐚 𝐤𝐝 Substitute the above equation in equation (c) , then K pA (1-θ) = θ……(d) 24 Equation (d) may rewritten as 𝟏−𝜽 𝜽 𝟏 𝜽 𝟏 𝜽 = 𝟏 𝑲𝒑𝑨 -1= 𝟏 𝑲𝒑𝑨 = 𝟏 𝑲𝒑𝑨 𝑲𝒑𝑨 𝟏+𝑲𝒑𝑨 +1= 𝟏+𝑲𝒑𝑨 𝑲𝒑𝑨 = θ…………(e) Equation (e) is called Langmuir adsorption isotherm 25 Langmuir Plot 26 Assumptions for Langmuir Adsorption Isotherm The adsorbed gas behaves ideally in the vapor phase. Only a monolayer is formed by the adsorbed Gas. The surface of the solid is homogeneous so that each binding site has the same affinity for the gas molecule. There is no lateral interaction between the adsorbed molecules. The adsorbed gas molecules are localized ie. They do not move around on the surface. 27 Drawbacks of Langmuir Assumptions The first assumption holds at low pressure. The second assumption breaks down when the pressure of the gas is increased. Third assumption is not true because the actual surfaces are heterogeneous. Fourth and fifth assumptions are also not valid. 28 Special features of Langmuir Isotherm Consider equation (e) , At low pressure KpA << 1, so that θ = K pA The fraction of the surface covered is directly proportional to the Partial pressure of the gas molecule. The behavior corresponds to First-order reaction and is depicted by the initial steep rise of the Isotherm. At high pressure, KpA ˃˃ 1, so the equation (e) reduces to θ = 1. 29 The entire surface gets covered by a monolayer of the gas there by making the reaction independent of pressure. That is the reaction becomes zero order. Since at low pressure, adsorption is proportional to pressure θ = K (pA)1 At high pressure θ = K (pA)0 It follows that at intermediate pressure, the following expression should hold good θ = K (pA)n ( Freundlich Isotherm) 30 BET theory of Multilayer Adsorption Assumptions Here we are considering physical adsorption resulting in the multi layer adsorption. In BET it is assumed that the solid surface possesses uniform, localized sites and adsorption at one site does not affect adsorption at neighboring sites . It is further assumed that the molecule can be adsorbed in second, third…and nth layer, the surface area available for the nth layer being equal to the coverage of (n-1)th layer. The energy of adsorption in the first layer is E1, assumed to be constant and energy of adsorption in succeeding layers is assumed to Be the same as EL, the energy of liquefaction of gases. 31 Equation 𝒑 𝒗𝐭𝐨𝐭𝐚𝐥 (𝒑𝟎−𝒑) = 𝟏 𝐯𝐦𝐨𝐧𝐨𝐂 + 𝒄−𝟏 𝒑 ( ) 𝒗𝐦𝐨𝐧𝐨𝐂 𝒑𝟎 Vtotal is the volume of the gas adsorbed, vmono is the volume adsorbed when the surface of the solid is covered completely with a monolayer of the adsorbed gases and c is a constant depending upon the nature of the gas. Its numerical value is given approximately by the expression c = 𝑒 𝐸1−𝐸𝐿/𝑅𝑇 in which E1 is the heat of adsorption in the first layer And EL is the heat of liquefaction of the gas 32 BET Plot 33 Types of Adsorption Isotherm Type I Type II 34 35 Type I isotherms (e.g. ammonia on charcoal at 273 K) show a fairly rapid rise in the amount of adsorption with increasing pressure up to a limiting value. They are referred to as Langmuirtype isotherms and are obtained when adsorption is restricted to a monolayer. Type I isotherms have also been found for physical adsorption on solids containing a very fine pore structure (e.g. nitrogen on microporous carbon at 77 K). Type II isotherms (e.g. nitrogen on silica gel at 77 K) are frequently encountered, and represent multilayer physical adsorption on non-porous solids. They are often referred to as sigmoid isotherms. For such solids, point B represents the formation of an adsorbed monolayer. 36 Type IV isotherms (e.g. benzene on iron(III) oxide gel at 320 K) level off near the saturation vapour pressure and are considered to reflect capillary condensation in porous solids, the effective pore diameters usually being between 2 nm and 20 nm. The upper limit of adsorption is mainly governed by the total pore volume. Types III (e.g. bromine on silica gel at 352 K) and V (e.g. water vapour on charcoal at 373 K) show no rapid initial uptake of gas, and occur when the forces of adsorption in the first monolayer are relatively small. These isotherms are rare. 37 Catalysis 38 Catalyst is a substance that alters the rate of the reaction at which a chemical system approaches equilibrium , without being substantially consumed in the process. Catalyst affects only the rate of the reaction,i.e. Kinetics. It changes neither the thermodynamics of the reaction nor the equilibrium composition. 39 Thermodynamics says NOTHING about the rate of a reaction. Thermodynamics : Will a reaction occur ? Kinetics : If so, how fast ? 40 Kinetic Vs. Thermodynamic A reaction may have a large, negative ΔGrxn, but the rate may be so slow that there is no evidence of it occurring. Conversion of graphite to diamonds is a thermodynamic favor process (ΔG -ve ). C (graphite) C (diamond) Kinetics makes this reaction nearly impossible (Requires a very high pressure and temperature over long time) 41 Reaction path for conversion of A + B into AB 42 Catalyst lowers the activation energy for both forward and reverse reactions. 43 Why are Catalysts Important? Catalysts can: • make a reaction possible under achievable conditions • reduce the necessity of expensive & dangerous conditions • generate high yields and high product purity • reduce the amount of side-product and waste created • generate non-racemic mixtures of enantiomers • make a chemical process “greener” 44 Homogeneous and Heterogeneous catalysis 45 Homogeneous Catalysis Action • catalyst and reactants are in the same phase • reaction proceeds through an intermediate species with lower energy • there is usually more than one reaction step • transition metal ions are often involved - oxidation state changes • Homogeneous catalysts: efficiency expressed as turnover freq., N • Slectivity : a “selective” catalyst yields a high proportion of desired product with a marginal amount of side-products. 46 Homogeneous catalysts are more attractive for study in research labs because: a) the mechanism is accessible to detailed study (i.e., the rate data is easier to interpret) b) the species in solution are more easily characterized Advantages of homogeneous catalysis on an industrial scale: 1. High selectivity 2. Ease of heat dissipation from exothermic reactions Disadvantages of homogeneous catalysis on an industrial scale: 1. Scale-up can be costly, difficult, and dangerous 2. Separation is required 47 Examples: 1. Oxo process: Hydroformylation of alkenes 2. Wacker-Hoechst process: Oxidation of alkenes O RHC CH2 + O2 Pd(II) + Cu(II) H3C R R = H, aldehyde R = CnHn+2, ketone 48 5 Important Steps 1. Ligand Coordination and Dissociation 2. Insertion and Elimination 3. Nucleophilic attack on coordinated ligands 4. Oxidation and Reduction 5. Oxidative addition and Reductive elimination 49 Heterogeneous Catalysis Heterogeneous catalysts are more widely used in industry because: 1) Solid catalysts are robust at high T, P. 2) No solvents are required. 3) No separation of the product from the catalyst is required. 50 Classes of Heterogeneous Catalyst There are 2 classes of Heterogeneous catalyst: 1. Uniform catalyst is a high surface area material. e.g., ZSM-5 Na3(AlSi31O64)3•16H2O 2. Multiphasic catalyst is deposited on a high surface area material. Typical inert supports Silica gel, SiO2 microcrystalline γ-alumina, Al2O3 51 Heterogeneous Catalysts: Active Sites The active sites of heterogeneous catalysts are NOT uniform. Many types of sites are exposed on the surface of a material. Each type of site may serve a unique function in the catalysis. e.g., crystalline solids Irregularities (e.g., steps) Many exposed planes 52 Principle of Active sites The Sabatier principle proposes the existence of an unstable intermediate compound formed between the catalyst surface and at least one of the reactants. The Sabatier principle of unstable surface Intermediate requires chemical bonding of reactants to the catalyst surface, most likely between atoms or functional groups of reactant and surface atoms. This leads to the principle of active sites. An active site is a point on the surface that can form strong chemical bonds with an adsorbed atom or molecule. 53 Heterogeneous Catalysis Adsorption (STEP 1) Incoming species lands on an active site and forms bonds with the catalyst. It may use some of the bonding electrons in the molecules thus weakening them and making a subsequent reaction easier. Reaction (STEPS 2 and 3) Adsorbed gases may be held on the surface in just the right orientation for a reaction to occur. This increases the chances of favourable collisions taking place. Desorption (STEP 4) There is a re-arrangement of electrons and the products are then released from54 the active sites Examples Copper Dehydrogenation (oxidation) C2H5OH ——> CH3CHO + H2 Alumina Dehydration C2H5OH ——> C2H4 + H2O 55 The Surface Reaction Step 56 57 Another type of dual -site mechanism is the reaction between two adsorbed species, such as reaction of CO and O A third dual -site mechanism is the reaction of two species adsorbed on different types of sites S and S’ such as the reaction of CO and O 58 Reaction involving either single or dual-site mechanism, which were discussed sometimes referred to as following Langmuir-Hinshelwood Kinetics A third type mechanism is the reaction between an adsorbed molecule and a molecule in the gaseous phase , such as the reaction of benzene and propelene – Eley- Rideal mechanism. 59 Types of Catalysis Electrocatalysis (Oxidation or reduction by transfer of electrons) Photocatalysis (Catalysis by means of Light) Biocatalysis (Glucoammylase immobilized on SiO2 for the isomerization of glucose to fructose) Environmental Catalysis (Rh-Pt-CeO2-Al2O3 deposited on Ceramics) Greener Catalysis (High yield, Selective, marginal side products, No solvents) 60 Classification of Solid Catalysts Unsupported Catalysts Supported Catalysts Confined Catalysts Hybrid Catalysts Polymerization Catalysts 61 Unsupported Catalysts Metal Oxides Metal oxides are usually solids. Their bulk character mainly depend on the bonding character between metal and oxygen. Metal oxides have widely varying electronic properties and include Insulators (Al2O3, SiO2), Semiconductors (TiO2, ZnO, NiO), metallic Conductors (TiO, NbO), superconductors These are catalytically active substances where their surface properties and chemistry being determined by structure and composition, bonding character, coordination of surface atoms and hydroxyl groups in crystallographic phases. They can develop acid base and redox properties 62 Usually very active catalyst that do not require high surface area e.g., Iron catalyst for ammonia production (Haber process) Acidic and basic sites and acid-base pair sites have been identified on the surfaces of aluminas (Al2O3) As a result of this complexity, alumina surfaces develop a rich surface chemistry and specific catalytic properties. SiO2 is weakly acidic and MgO is basic solid. 63 64 Molecularly Imprinted Catalysts Molecular imprinting permits the heterogeneous supramolecular catalysis to be performed on surfaces of organic or inorganic material with substrate recognition. Imprinted catalysts can be prepared on the basis of Al3+ doped silica gel and of crosslinked polymers. When transition-state or reaction-intermediate analogues are used as templates for molecular imprinting, specific adsorption sites are created. 65 66 Metal-Organic Frameworks MOF’s are highly porous, crystalline solids consisting of a three dimensional network of metal ions attached to multidentate organic molecules. Similar to Zeolites, the spatial organization of the structural units give rise to a system of channels and cavities on the nanometer length scale. Due to their extremely high surface areas and their tunable pore structure with respect to size, shape, and function, MOFs are highly interesting materials for various applications. Eg: Catalytic reactions, Gas storage etc. 67 Despite their higher metal content compared to zeolites, the use of MOFs in heterogeneous catalysis is restricted due to their relatively low stability at elevated temperature and in the presence of water vapor or chemical reagents. In addition, the metal ions in MOFs are often blocked by the organic linker molecules and are therefore not accessible for catalytic reactions. However, successful applications of especially stable Pd MOFs in alcohol oxidation, Suzuki C–C coupling and olefin hydrogenation have been reported. 68 Hybrid catalysts Hybrid catalysts combine the properties of Homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis. The goal of approach is to combine the positive aspects of Homogeneous catalysts in terms of activity, selectivity and the variability of steric and electronic factors by the appropriate choice of ligands with advantages of Heterogeneous catalysts such as ease of preparation and recovery of catalyst. This can be achieved by immobilization of active metal complexes, Organometallic compounds, enzymes on solid support. Eg: Anchoring of catalytically active species via covalent bonding on the surface of inorganic supports such as SiO2, MCM-41, Zeolites etc. 69 Chemical fixation by ionic bonding using ion exchange Deposition of species on the surface of the material through chemisorption or through CVD. Ship-in-a-Bottle Catalysts Metal complexes which are physically entrapped in the confined spaces of Zeolite cages are known as Ship-in-a-Bottle or tea-bag catalysts. The entrapped complexes retain many of the solution properties. Here catalytic performance can be modified by shape selectivity, electrostatic environment and acid-base properties of Zeolite host. These are known as Host – guest supramolecular Compounds. 70 Zeolites What is ZSM-5 Catalyst ? It is an abbreviation for (Zeolite Scony Mobile Number 5 ) First synthesized by Mobil Company in 1972 It replaces many Homogeneous Catalysts were used in many petrochemical processes ZSM-5 has two diameters for its pores : d1= 5.6 Å , d2= 5.4 Å Where as, Zeolite Y has a diameter = 7.4 Å 71 Properties ZSM-5 The ZSM-5 zeolite catalyst is used in the petroleum industry for hydrocarbon interconversion. ZSM-5 zeolite is a highly porous aluminosilicate with a high silica/alumina ratio. It has an intersecting two-dimensional pore structure. The aluminum sites are very acidic. The acidity of the zeolite is very high. The reaction and catalysis chemistry of the ZSM-5 is due to this acidity. 72 Shape selective catalysts Zeolites and related materials contain regular microporous, the diameter of which are determined by structure of the molecule. The pore sizes are well defined and have dimensions similar to those of small organic molecules. The geometric constraints may act on sorption of reactants, on the Transition state of the catalyzed reaction, or on the desorption of Products. Based on that shape selective effects have been classified as a) Reactant shape selectivity b) restricted transition state shape selectivity c) product shape selectivity 73 Reactant Shape Selectivity Cracking of n-heptane and 1-methylhexane – Kinetic diameter of n-heptane is smaller than that of 1-methylhexane, so that the latter is not able to enter micropores so that shape selective cracking of n-heptane takes place when both hydrocarbons are present in the feed. Transition state shape selectivity Transalkylation of m-Xylene – The reaction is bimolecular and formation of 1,3,4-trimethylbenzene has a less bulky transition state than the formation of 1,3,5-trymethylbenzene. 74 Product shape selectivity Alkylation of toluene – p-Xylene can be selectively formed by methylation of toluene with methanol and zeolites whose pore openings only Allow p-Xylene to be released. The o and m isomers either accumulate in zeolite cages or are isomerized to p-Xylene. 75 Classification of Shape selective effects 76 Photocatalysis Generally catalysts are the substances that alters the rate of a chemical reaction. Photocatalysis is the acceleration of photoreaction in the presence of a catalyst. In heterogeneous photocatalysis almost all the reactions take place at the surface of a catalyst. 77 Photocatalysis can be divided into two classes of Processes Catalyzed photoreaction Sensitized photoreaction Semiconductor materials can be act as good Photocatalysts. Chem. Rev., 1995, 95, 735-758. 78 Irradiated n-type Semiconductors Generation of “electron- hole pair” intermediate. 79 General mechanism of photodegradation Complete Mineralization 80 Activity Studies 10 ml of 10-4 M aqueous solution of Herbicide. Light Source – 150W ozone free Xe lamp with 420-630 nm dichoric mirror as the filter. The concentration of the Herbicide was monitored using HPLC (on a 25/15cm, 5μm ODS-2 C-18 column -UV/PDA detector). Percentage Degradation = {Co – C} X 100 / Co, Where C0 and C are the initial and final concentration of the Herbicides. 81 Photo-oxidation 82 Preparation of Catalysts Sol-Gel Method 83 84 Advantages of Sol-Gel Technique • Preparation normally carried out at room temp. • Chemical conditions are mild • Gives better surface area • Gives better pore sized particles • Gives better nano scaled particles 85 Hydrothermal and Solvothermal Synthesis • Synthesis includes various techniques of crystallizing substances from high-temperature aqueous solutions at high vapor pressures. 86 Steps involved: Reactants are dissolved in water and taken in a bomb Reaction mixture is heated above the BP of water for long time periods The catalyst is extracted and separated. Same procedure is followed for SOLVO-THERMAL process where a suitable solvent is used instead of water. 87 Solution Combustion Synthesis Oxidizer + Fuel oxide catalyst 88 Mix Stir Heat Steps involved Cool Extrac t 89 Advanatages of Solution Combustion method 90 Characterization of Catalysts 91 X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS) Theory – Photoelectric Effect • XPS spectra are obtained by irradiating a material with a beam of X-rays while simultaneously measuring the kinetic energy and number of electrons that escape from the top 0 to 10 nm of the material being analyzed. • It is known as ESCA. • XPS detects all elements except Hydrogen and Helium. • Detection limits for most of the elements (on a modern instrument) are in the parts per thousand range. Detection limits of parts per million (ppm) are possible, but require special conditions: concentration at top surface or very long collection time (overnight). • Al Kα X-rays or Mg Kα X-rays (monochromatic) 92 Einstein’s Photoelectric Equation • In solid-state physics, the work function (sometimes spelled workfunction) is the minimum thermodynamic work (i.e. energy) needed to remove an electron from a solid to a point in the vacuum immediately outside the solid surface. • Why UHV - Remove adsorbed gases from the sample. Eliminate adsorption of contaminants on the sample. Prevent arcing and high voltage breakdown. Increase the mean free path for electrons, ions and photons. Electron counting detectors in XPS instruments are typically one meter away from the material irradiated with X-rays. This long path length for detection requires such low pressures. 93 • A typical XPS spectrum is a plot of the number of electrons detected (sometimes per unit time) (Y-axis, ordinate) versus the binding energy of the electrons detected (X-axis, abscissa). Each element produces a characteristic set of XPS peaks at characteristic binding energy values that directly identify each element that exists in or on the surface of the material being analyzed. • The number of detected electrons in each of the characteristic peaks is directly related to the amount of element within the XPS sampling volume. To generate atomic percentage values, each raw XPS signal must be corrected by dividing its signal intensity (number of electrons detected) by a "relative sensitivity factor" (RSF), and normalized over all of the elements detected. 94 • Signals detected from analytes at the surface much stronger than the signals detected from analytes deeper below the sample surface. Thus, the signal measured by XPS is an exponentially surface-weighted signal. • 1–20 minutes for a broad survey scan that measures the amount of all detectable elements, typically 1–15 minutes for high resolution scan that reveal chemical state differences (for a high signal/noise ratio for count area result often requires multiple sweeps of the region of interest), 1–4 hours for a depth profile that measures 4–5 elements as a function of etched depth (this process time can vary the most as many factors will play a role). • The minimum analysis area ranges from 10 to 200 micrometres. 95 Spin-Orbit Splitting Spin-orbit splitting is an initial state effect. For any electron in orbital with orbital angular momentum, coupling between magnetic fields of spin (s) and angular momentum (l) occurs Lower BE Higher BE 96 Photoelectrıct effect 97 X-ray Fluorescence 98 Auger Spectroscopy 99 • X-rays and gamma rays can be energetic enough to expel tightly held electrons from the inner orbitals of the atom. The removal of an electron in this way makes the electronic structure of the atom unstable, and electrons in higher orbitals "fall" into the lower orbital to fill the hole left behind. In falling, energy is released in the form of a photon, the energy of which is equal to the energy difference of the two orbitals involved. Thus, the material emits radiation, which has energy characteristic of the atoms present. • When a core electron is removed, leaving a vacancy, an electron from a higher energy level may fall into the vacancy, resulting in a release of energy. Although most of the time this energy is released in the form of an emitted photon, the energy can also be transferred to another electron, which is ejected from the atom. This second ejected electron is called an Auger electron. 100 • Satellites arise when a core electron is removed by a photoionization. There is a sudden change in the effective charge due to the loss of shielding electrons. • Shake-up: The outgoing electron interacts with a valence electron and excites it (shakes it up) to a higher energy level. As a consequence the energy core electron is reduced and a satellite structure appears a few eV below (KE scale) the core level position. 101 Shake-off: The valence electron is ejected from the ion completely (to the continuum). Appears as a broadening of the core level peak or contribute to the inelastic background. Emission from non-monochromatic x-ray sources produces satellite peaks in XPS spectrum at lower BE. Ghost peaks are due to contamination of the x-ray source, which produces x-ray emission at different wavelength and it can also due to contamination of the sample holder etc. 102 Quantification of XPS 103 Scanning Electron Microscopy • A scanning electron microscope (SEM) is a type of electron microscope that produces images of a sample by scanning it with a focused beam of electrons. • The types of signals produced by a SEM include secondary electrons (SE), back-scattered electrons (BSE), characteristic Xrays. • The signals result from interactions of the electron beam with atoms at or near the surface of the sample. 104 • In the most common or standard detection mode, secondary electron imaging or SEI, the SEM can produce very highresolution images of a sample surface, revealing details less than 1 nm in size. Due to the very narrow electron beam, SEM micrographs have a large depth of field yielding a characteristic three-dimensional appearance useful for understanding the surface structure of a sample. • Back-scattered electrons (BSE) are beam electrons that are reflected from the sample by elastic scattering. BSE signal is strongly related to the atomic number (Z) of the specimen. BSE images can provide information about the distribution of different elements in the sample. 105 • Characteristic X-rays are emitted when the electron beam removes an inner shell electron from the sample, causing a higher-energy electron to fill the shell and release energy. These characteristic X-rays are used to identify the composition and measure the abundance of elements in the sample. 106 Powder X-ray Diffraction X-rays are partially scattered by atoms when they strike the surface of a crystal. The part of the X-ray that is not scattered passes through to the next layer of atoms, where again part of the X-ray is scattered and part passes through to the next layer. This causes an overall diffraction pattern, similar to how a grating diffracts a beam of light. In order for an X-ray to diffract the sample must be crystalline and the spacing between atom layers must be close to the radiation wavelength. If beams diffracted by two different layers are in phase, constructive interference occurs and the diffraction pattern shows a peak, however if they are out of phase, destructive interference occurs appear and there is no peak. Diffraction peaks only occur if sinθ=nλ/2d 107 4000 Intensity 3000 2000 1000 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Angle (2) Amorphous Pattern Crystalline Pattern 108 Crystallite Size of a material can be determined by Scherrer equation D = Kλ / βcosθ where K is a dimensionless constant, 2θ is the diffraction angle, λ is the wavelength of the X-ray radiation, and β is the full width at half-maximum (FWHM) of the diffraction peak . Crystallite size is inversely related to the FWHM of an individual peak. That is narrower the peak, larger the particle size. Ultimately, the size of the nanomaterials purely depends on the FWHM of the diffraction peak. Phase identification is another important task of XRD. In powder X-ray diffraction, the phase corresponding to a particular plane can be identified by comparing it with reference spectra from JCPDS. 109 Thank You 110