Unraveling surface structures of gallium promoted transition metal catalysts in CO2 hydrogenation

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Abstract

Gallium-containing alloys have recently been reported to hydrogenate CO2 to methanol at ambient pressures. However, a full understanding of the Ga-promoted catalysts is still missing due to the lack of information about the surface structures formed under reaction conditions. Here, we employed near ambient pressure scanning tunneling microscopy and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to monitor the evolution of well-defined Cu-Ga surfaces during CO2 hydrogenation. We show the formation of two-dimensional Ga(III) oxide islands embedded into the Cu surface in the reaction atmosphere. The islands are a few atomic layers in thickness and considerably differ from bulk Ga2O3 polymorphs. Such a complex structure, which could not be determined with conventional characterization methods on powder catalysts, should be used for elucidating the reaction mechanism on the Ga-promoted metal catalysts.

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Lee, S. W., Luna, M. L., Berdunov, N., Wan, W., Kunze, S., Shaikhutdinov, S., & Cuenya, B. R. (2023). Unraveling surface structures of gallium promoted transition metal catalysts in CO2 hydrogenation. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-40361-3

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