Abstract
Introduction A. General The heart of many commercial catalytic processes involves chemistry on transition metal particles and surfaces. The success in designing active surface ensembles, promoters, and selective poisons is inevitably tied to our knowledge of the fundamental principles which control transition metal surface chemistry. One extreme would be the rigorous description and energetic predictions for each elementary reaction step of an entire catalytic cycle from first-principle theoretical methods. While desirable, this has to date been an unattainable goal due to the limitations in both raw computer (CPU) requirements and the accuracy of the available computational methods. Recent advances in both quantum-chemical methods and computational resources, however, are driving this goal closer to reality. Theoretical treatments of adsorbate-surface interactions have rapidly advanced to the stage where detailed understandings of the governing structural and electronic features are readily available. In many cases, reliable quantitative predictions of the structure and energetics can also be made. While an exhaustive review of all theoretical treatments of adsorbate surface interactions and catalytic reactivity would be of great value, the tremendous volume published in this area makes this a difficult goal. Instead, we highlight a set of essential theoretical concepts which govern important aspects of surface reactivity and describe how they dictate both activity and selectivity. We specifically target the catalytic chemist and reaction engineer, with the hope that these concepts will lead to a more advanced set of levers to aid and facilitate the design of new and improved catalyst formulations and optimal operating conditions.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Advances in the Physics of High-Temperature Superconductivity
The high-temperature copper oxide superconductors are of fundamental and enduring interest. They not only manifest superconducting transition temperatures inconceivable 15 years...
How well does the Hartree–Fock model predict equilibrium geometries of transition metal complexes? Large-scale LCAO–SCF studies on ferrocene and decamethylferrocene
Large scale ab initio LCAO–SCF calculations performed on ferrocene show that the Hartree–Fock model is unable to account for the experimentally observed metal to ring distance. ...
Surface-enhanced spectroscopy
In 1978 it was discovered, largely through the work of Fleischmann, Van Duyne, Creighton, and their coworkers that molecules adsorbed on specially prepared silver surfaces produ...
Understanding reactivity with Kohn-Sham molecular orbital theory: E2-SN2 mechanistic spectrum and other concepts
On the basis of Kohn–Sham density functional (DFT) investigations on elementary organic and organometallic reactions, we show how a detailed understanding of the electronic stru...
Data-Driven High-Throughput Prediction of the 3-D Structure of Small Molecules: Review and Progress
Accurate prediction of the 3-D structure of small molecules is essential in order to understand their physical, chemical, and biological properties, including how they interact ...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1995
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 37
- Issue
- 4
- Pages
- 557-698
- Citations
- 288
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1080/01614949508006451