Adsorbate-induced structural evolution changes the mechanism of CO oxidation on a Rh/Fe3O4(001) model catalyst

Publication date
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9nr10087c
Reference Z. Jakub, J. Hulva, P.T.P. Ryan, D.A. Duncan, D.J. Payne, R. Bliem, M. Ulreich, P. Hofegger, F. Kraushofer, M. Meier, M. Schmid, U. Diebold and G.S. Parkinson, Adsorbate-induced structural evolution changes the mechanism of CO oxidation on a Rh/Fe3O4(001) model catalyst, Nanoscale 12, (10), 5866-5875 (2020)
Group Materials & Surface Science for EUVL

The structure of a catalyst often changes in reactive environments, and following the structural evolution is crucial for the identification of the catalyst’s active phase and reaction mechanism. Here we present an atomic-scale study of CO oxidation on a model Rh/Fe3O4(001) “single-atom” catalyst, which has a very different evolution depending on which of the two reactants, O2 or CO, is adsorbed first. Using temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) combined with scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), we show that O2 destabilizes Rh atoms, leading to the formation of RhxOy clusters; these catalyze CO oxidation via a Langmuir–Hinshelwood mechanism at temperatures as low as 200 K. If CO adsorbs first, the system is poisoned for direct interaction with O2, and CO oxidation is dominated by a Mars-van-Krevelen pathway at 480 K.