1996
DOI: 10.1007/bf00807616
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The relation between reduction temperature and activity in copper catalysed ester hydrogenolysis and methanol synthesis

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Cited by 53 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…Such spillover and a bifunctional synthesis mechanism were demonstrated by infrared spectroscopy to occur during methanol synthesis from CO 2 -containing reactants [8,38]. There is also evidence that reconstruction of Cu particles supported on ZnO [26][27][28][29] Although we detect Cu(II) in our Cu/SiO 2 catalyst, the fraction of the Cu atoms in this form does not correlate with the rate of methanol synthesis. Other groups have already concluded that Cu metal is the only required form of Cu at least for CO 2 -containing synthesis gas reactants [11,12], and have explicitly rejected the presence of Cu(I) in working catalysts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
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“…Such spillover and a bifunctional synthesis mechanism were demonstrated by infrared spectroscopy to occur during methanol synthesis from CO 2 -containing reactants [8,38]. There is also evidence that reconstruction of Cu particles supported on ZnO [26][27][28][29] Although we detect Cu(II) in our Cu/SiO 2 catalyst, the fraction of the Cu atoms in this form does not correlate with the rate of methanol synthesis. Other groups have already concluded that Cu metal is the only required form of Cu at least for CO 2 -containing synthesis gas reactants [11,12], and have explicitly rejected the presence of Cu(I) in working catalysts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Incomplete reductions of Cu-ZnO/Al 2 O 3 at 503 K [16,17] and of Cu/SiO 2 at 500 K [28,36,37] have been reported and the reduction of CuO x phases may lead to an increase in reaction rates with time on stream. van der Grift et al [36,37] found by temperature programmed reduction (TPR) that several copper hydrosilicate phases reduced only above 600 K. Brands et al [28] found that Cu metal surface area increased, when a Cu/SiO 2 catalyst previously reduced at 600 K was re-reduced at 700 K. Clausen et al [26] reported that the morphology of Cu particles formed on SiO 2 by reduction in various synthesis gas mixtures at 493 K was insensitive to gas composition. Although Cu particle sizes were not reported, inspection of the EXAFS data presented with the paper indicates that the Cu particles on SiO 2 were similar in size to the particles on ZnO, for which dynamical behavior was clearly observed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Milling in synthetic air (20% O 2 in N 2 , 99.999% pure) was performed at a pressure of 2 bar after evacuation, filling with this gas and again evacuation to 10 -6 mbar. The Cu 0 specific surface areas of Cu/ZnO samples were determined by N 2 O chemisorption according to the method described in [15] using Thermogravimetic Analysis (TGA). Prior to the chemisorption experiments, the samples were pre-treated in Ar and reduced in H 2 /Ar (see below).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[10]. For chemisorption measurements the samples were calcined for 12 h in situ in an Ar-flow (99.999% pure at 120 ml/min) after heating up at 200 K/h to 508 K; at 100 K/h to 523 K; cooling in Ar to ambient and subsequently reduced for 1 h in Ar/H 2 (at a ratio of 33/66; total flow: 120 ml/min; hydrogen purity: 99.996%) with an identical temperature programme.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%