2017 Annual Meeting
(469c) Theoretical Investigation of the Ring Opening Mechanism of Cyclohexanes on Ir Surfaces
The focus of this talk will be on the effects that surface morphologyand substitution have on the ring opening reaction on Ir. We are theoretically investigating the ring opening mechanism of cyclohexane and substituted cyclohexanes on the close-packed Ir(111) and stepped Ir(211) surfaces as a basis for understanding the fundamental ability of Ir to promote SRO. We perform detailed density functional theory calculations to identify the more facile reaction channels for each reaction intermediate in order to construct the minimum-energy reaction pathway for the ring opening of a given cycloalkane species. We find that in the low coverage limit, repeated dehydrogenation of cyclohexane at positions closer to the surface is kinetically highly facile, so that neither cyclohexene nor benzene is a major product. Instead, C-C cleavage ensues after 4~5 sequential dehydrogenation steps depending on the surface, producing a metallocycle. This stands in contrast to the decomposition of cyclohexane on Pt, where benzene is a major product [5,6]. The reaction intermediates generally adsorb more strongly on Ir(211) than on Ir(111), but the reaction activation barriers are not always lower on the step edge. Our findings provide clues for enhancing the ability of Ir catalysts to more selectively cleave substituted C-C bonds, thereby increasing the CN of the resultant hydrocarbons.
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