2017 Annual Meeting
(483e) Surface Studies of Functional Alcohol Decomposition on Pt and Pd
Authors
Our recent studies have found that there appears to be key differences in the kinetics and mechanism for furfuryl alcohol hydrodeoxygenation. On Pd(111), the lowest-barrier reaction pathway was found to involve direct transfer hydrogenation between neighboring adsorbates, but this mechanism does not appear to be operable on Pt(111). However, on Pt(111), furfuryl alcohol can either proceed through high-barrier transfer to produce methylfuran or decarbonylation to furan, which also occurs on Pd(111). In the HDO pathway, furfuryl alcohol undergoes CâO bond scission to form methylfuran and water. Decarbonylation occurs through the dehydrogenation of furfuryl alcohol to make furfural followed by decarbonylation to produce furan, which undergoes further decomposition on Pt(111) to produce propylene and CO. Most furfuryl alcohol reaction and desorption pathways are similar on Pt(111) and Pd(111) and the relative barriers of the major products is the same. However, on Pt(111) benzene is also produced as a volatile product, and is likely formed via coupling of C3 surface intermediates.