The dehydrogenation of butane on metal-free graphene

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Abstract

The dehydrogenation of alkane feedstock to produce alkenes is a significant and energy intensive industrial process, generally occurring on metals and metal oxides. Here, we investigate a catalytic mechanism for the dehydrogenation of butane on single-layer, metal-free graphene using a combination of ab initio quantum chemical calculations and adsorption microcalorimetry. Dispersion-corrected Density Functional Theory (DFT) is employed to calculate transition states and energy minima that describe the reaction pathways connecting butane to the two possible products, but-1-ene and but-2-ene. The deprotonations occur with moderate energy barriers in the 0.54 eV-0.69 eV range. A strong agreement is observed between the results of the adsorption energies calculated by DFT (0.40 eV) and the measured differential heat of adsorption of n-butane on a graphitic overlayer. We conclude that the active-site for this catalytic reaction is a metal-free graphene vacancy, created by removing a carbon atom from a single-layer graphene sheet.

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Brooks, A., Jenkins, S. J., Wrabetz, S., McGregor, J., & Sacchi, M. (2022). The dehydrogenation of butane on metal-free graphene. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, 619, 377–387. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2022.03.128

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