2008 Annual Meeting
(63a) Interactions of SO2 and H2S with Modified Amorphous Carbon Films
Authors
In this work, we use ultra-high vacuum (UHV) techniques to carefully prepare and thoroughly characterize amorphous carbon (a-C) thin films as models of activated carbon sorbent-catalysts. Films with modified surface chemistries were prepared by post-deposition oxidation of a sputtered carbon film (a-COx) and by sputtering in the presence of N2 (for a-CNx) or methane (for a-CHx). Temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) were used to study H2S and SO2 surface chemistry on the films. For comparison, we performed similar experiments on a highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) surface.
SO2 and H2S readily adsorb on the unmodified a-C surface at low temperature in UHV. In TPD experiments, both desorb with first-order kinetics and desorption energies (Edes) that are higher than their respective heats of sublimation. The chemically modified a-COx surface adsorbs less H2S and SO2 than a-C, but desorption kinetics and energetics are unaffected, suggesting a simple site blocking mechanism. In contrast, modification as a-CNx and a-CHx significantly alters the nature of the interactions between the adsorbed molecules and the carbon surface. SO2 continues to adsorb in significant quantities on these surfaces, but desorbs from both with zero order kinetics, indicative of adsorption as islands or droplets on the surfaces. H2S does not adsorb onto either a-CNx or a-CHx in appreciable quantities, mirroring the behavior of the inactive HOPG surface.
These results illustrate the potential for chemical modification of carbon surfaces for altering adsorption/reaction pathways.