Methanol dehydrogenation occurs in oxidative (ODH) or anaerobic (ADH) conditions, generating H
2O on oxide catalysts or H
2 on metal catalysts, respectively; taking copper oxide nanoparticles (CuO
x) as an example, depending on the contacting fluid environment, CuO
x may catalyze either ODH or ADH reactions where structures reduce from oxide (CuO and Cu
2O) to metal (Cu
0) states with decreasing oxygen chemical potential at the surface.
[1] During the oxide-to-metal phase transition, active sites strained at the metal-oxide interfaces could be more reactive than their stable counterparts,
[2] but current transient methods used to probe these sites cannot accurately couple the intermediate states with their reactivity. Here, we uncover the reactivity of metastable CuO
x active sites, circumventing the limitation of transient techniques by coupling rigorous kinetic assessments—free of heat and mass transport corruptions—with operando spatially-resolved x-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) under oxygen-lean integral conditions. As reactor residence time increases, Cu
2+ reduces to Cu
1+ and Cu
0 because H
2O desorption in ODH Mars-van Krevelen catalytic cycles removes lattice oxygen atoms to reduce the Cu state; we reveal that all Cu states in this phase transition (CuO
x from x=0–1) are a single-valued function of the instantaneous oxygen-to-methanol ratio. On intermediate CuO
x surfaces, instantaneous CH
3OH ADH rates are five-fold higher than their steady state counterparts (for O
2/CH
3OH of 0.016, 7.4 vs. 1.3 mmol (g-atom-Cu
surf s)
-1, 5 kPa CH
3OH, 503 K), because surface Cu
0 sites are polarized at the Cu
0-Cu
2O-CuO interfaces. Taken together, these findings paint a mechanistic picture of oxide-to-metal phase transitions and illustrate the critical role of strained active sites for promoting dehydrogenation catalysis.
[1] Broomhead, W. T.; Chin, Y.-H. Catalysis, Royal Society of Chemistry, 2024, 35, 69–105.
[2] Ruiz Puigdollers, A.; Schlexer, P.; Tosoni, S.; Pacchioni, G. ACS Catalysis 2017, 7, 6493–6513.