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First Principle Study on the Adsorption of Hydrocarbon Chains Involved in Fischer-Tropsch Synthesis over Iron Carbides José Guillermo Rivera de la Cruz, Maarten K. Sabbe, and Marie-Françoise Reyniers J. Phys. Chem. C, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b05864 • Publication Date (Web): 13 Oct 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 13, 2017
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry
First Principle Study on the Adsorption of Hydrocarbon Chains Involved in Fischer-Tropsch Synthesis over Iron Carbides José G. Rivera de la Cruz, Maarten K. Sabbe,∗ and Marie-Françoise Reyniers Laboratory for Chemical Technology, Ghent University, Technologiepark 914, B-9052 Ghent, Belgium E-mail:
[email protected] Phone: +32 (0)9 331 17 33
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Abstract
1
2
The adsorption of n-alkyls, 1-alkenes and n-alkanes has been studied on the χ-
3
Fe5 C2 (010), Fe7 C3 (001), θ-Fe3 C(001) and η-Fe2 C(011) surfaces which have been re-
4
ported as active phases for an Fe-based Fischer-Tropsch catalysts. Spin-polarized den-
5
sity functional theory calculations with the vdW-DF2 functional were performed. The
6
most stable adsorption configuration for n-alkyls is a bridge position for χ-Fe5 C2 (010),
7
Fe7 C3 (001) and θ-Fe3 C(001), whereas for η-Fe2 C(011) the most stable configuration is
8
on-top. The surfaces with the larger surface carbon content present a higher affinity for
9
the adsorption of n-alkyls. For adsorption of 1-alkenes the χ-Fe5 C2 (010) surface shows
10
the strongest adsorption, with a di-σ adsorption mode. For n-alkanes the strongest ph-
11
ysisorption was found for the smoothest surface, i.e., the θ-Fe3 C(001). The adsorption
12
energies are found to be independent of the length of the hydrocarbon chain from a
13
chain length of three carbon atoms for n-alkyl species, five carbon atoms for 1-alkenes
14
and four for n-alkanes.
15
Introduction
16
Fischer-Tropsch Synthesis (FTS) is a process to transform CO and H2 into a wide range of
17
products such as hydrocarbons and oxygenated compounds that can be used as high quality
18
fuels. Commonly, FTS uses syngas as feedstock, which is commonly generated from supplies
19
such as coal, natural gas, and biomass. As a result, FTS is increasing its relevance because
20
it can be an alternative for the depleting crude oil resources. 1,2
21
Several transition metals (Ru, Fe and Co) can be employed as catalysts for FTS, but
22
only Fe and Co are used industrially. Fe-based catalysts are widely available at a low price,
23
and they possess a high activity, a wide operating range and a high selectivity towards
24
alkenes. 1,3–10
25
Fe-based catalysts are mainly precipitated iron oxide phases, such as α-Fe2 O3 , γ-Fe2 O3 ,
26
FeOOH, Fe3 O4 and FeO. These phases are inactive for FTS until they are subjected to 2
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an activation process with syngas, in which the catalyst undergoes several transformations,
2
leading to metallic, oxide and carbide phases. 1,3,4,11–13
3
Experimental evidence from Transmission Electronic Microscopy (TEM), X-ray diffrac-
4
tion (XRD) and Mössbauer spectroscopy shows that iron carbides are the main active phases
5
in FTS. 5,9,12–18 Previous theoretical and experimental research has identified the phases χ-
6
Fe5 C2 , Fe7 C3 , θ-Fe3 C and η-Fe2 C under FTS conditions. 4,8,14,16,19–23 In addition to the carbide
7
phases, other phases such as α-Fe and Fe2 O3 can coexist. 1,5,13
8
Comprehension of the formation pathways of long-chain hydrocarbons on these surfaces
9
represents a deeper understanding for further optimization of FTS. However, such complex
10
systems with several coexisting phases are difficult to study in detail using analytical tech-
11
niques. Therefore, the use of theoretical studies opens up the possibility to describe the
12
properties of the iron carbides phases in detail, providing structures and energies for the
13
different species present on the catalytic surface. 24
14
Most of the theoretical research on iron carbides is focused on the adsorption and ac-
15
tivation of CO and H2 on the catalyst. 21,22,24–26 These studies have found several stable
16
adsorption sites depending on the studied surface. Regarding the activation of CO and H2
17
on iron carbides it has been reported that the most feasible route for CO activation is the
18
H-assisted dissociation, leading to different surface species such as HCO and Cx Hy , which
19
can be the building blocks for larger hydrocarbons in FTS. However, the actual identity of
20
the building blocks is still under debate, 8,19,27–30 whereas the surface hydrocarbons species
21
are properly identified yet little studied. 6,31,32 Therefore, because of the high complexity of
22
Fischer-Tropsch synthesis, typically several hypothesis are made to reduce the degree of com-
23
plexity. One of the mostly widely used approaches in the context of surface hydrocarbons is
24
to assume that only for small hydrocarbon chains the adsorption strength will depend on the
25
chain length and that it will become constant after a certain length. For instance, Lozano
26
et al. 10 assumes a chain length dependence only up to a carbon chain length of three, with
27
constant adsorption energies for larger adsorbed hydrocarbons. However, this hypothesis
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has not yet been validated until now.
2
In this work, detailed density functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed to
3
study the adsorption of long hydrocarbon chains on iron carbide surfaces, in order to better
4
understand the effect of composition and morphology of the different phases present under
5
FTS conditions on the adsorption behaviour.
6
Methods and models
7
Electronic structure calculations
8
In this study, periodic DFT calculations were performed using the Vienna ab initio simulation
9
package (VASP 5.3.3), 33–36 to obtain adsorption energies and adsorption geometries. Plane-
10
wave basis sets via the projector augmented wave method (PAW) 37,38 describe the wave
11
function close to the nuclei. The wave function is expanded in terms of plane-wave basis
12
sets with a cutoff of 400 eV. Exchange and correlation energies were calculated using the
13
vdW-DF2 functional of Langreth and Lundqvist et al. implemented in VASP by Klimes
14
et al. 39–42 This non-local functional also describes long-range interactions such as van der
15
Waals (vdW) interactions. To the best of our knowledge there is no literature comparing the
16
use of vdW-DF functionals for iron carbides. Also, no accurate experimental information is
17
available to use as a benchmark for the adsorption of hydrocarbons on these phases. In the
18
absence of such studies, we can in a first approximation assume that the results obtained for
19
the adsorption of hydrocarbons on Pt by Gautier et al. can be transferred to this work. 43
20
Gautier et al. have studied the impact of the inclusion of vdW functionals on the adsorption
21
strength of different hydrocarbons on Pt and compared the obtained results with available
22
experimental data. It was found that in the case of saturated hydrocarbons vdW functionals
23
are able to predict the low adsorption strength, present in physisorption, which is commonly
24
underestimated or not accounted for by PW91 and PBE functionals. 43,44 Moreover, in the
25
framework of FTS, previous studies indicate that the use of vdW-DF functionals provides 4
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an accurate description of CO adsorption on hcp-Co(0001). 45
2
To describe the partial occupancies close to the Fermi level, the first-order Methfessel-
3
Paxton method was applied with a smearing width of 0.01 eV. Brillouin-zone integration
4
for bulk calculations was done on a 5×5×5 Monkhorst-pack grid, 46 whereas for the (2×1)
5
and (2×2) slabs it was carried out on a 5×5×1 (k-point grids in the reciprocal space can
6
be found in Supporting information Figures S1-S4). The approximate k-point spacing in
7
reciprocal space amounts to at most 0.03 Å−1 for θ-Fe3 C(001), 0.02 Å−1 for Fe7 C3 (001) and
8
η-Fe2 C(011) and to 0.015 Å−1 for χ-Fe5 C2 (001)0.00 . Gas phase calculations were carried out
9
in a 20Å×20Å×20Å unit cell considering only the Γ point. Due to the magnetic properties
10
of the system, spin polarization was included. The electronic energy convergence was set
11
to 1 × 10−6 eV. For the geometry optimization Davidson and RMM-DIIS algorithms 47 were
12
used, until the maximum forces on the atoms were lower than 1.5 × 10−2 eV/Å. Slabs were
13
repeated in three directions to create a periodic surface model. A vacuum layer of 20 Å was
14
included in the perpendicular direction to the surface, coupled with an artificial dipole layer,
15
to avoid interactions between periodic images. 48 Only the atoms of the upper half of the slab
16
were allowed to relax, together with the adsorbed species; the lower half of the slab remained
17
fixed at its corresponding bulk position (the precise fixed atoms are indicated Figure S5 of
18
the Supporting information). In the absence of literature data about the stability of the
19
different surface planes of a given phase the electronic surface energy, Γ, was calculated,
20
defined as the energy required to create a surface from the bulk (Eq. (1)):
Γ=
Eslab − nbulk Ebulk 2·A
(1)
21
in which, Eslab is the electronic energy of the relaxed slab, Ebulk is the electronic energy of
22
the bulk unit cell, nbulk is the number of bulk unit cells required to construct the slab, and
23
A is the surface area of the slab unit cell, which is multiplied by two because slabs used in
24
the periodic calculations possess two surfaces. In this case only the upper half of the slab
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1
is relaxed, whereas for the lower half atoms are fixed at their corresponding bulk positions.
2
This does not result in surface energies that can be compared to experiments but provides
3
sufficient information for relative stabilities.
4
The adsorption energy (∆Eadsi ) of the different adsorbates is calculated as: (Eq. (2))
∆Eadsi = Ei+slab − Eslab + Eig
(2)
5
in which, Ei+slab , Eslab and Eig are the electronic energies of the slab-adsorbate system, the
6
bare slab and the species i in gas phase, respectively. To understand adsorption trends better,
7
the adsorption energy can be decomposed in two parts: the surface-adsorbate interaction
8
and the deformation energy (Eq. 3)
∆Eadsi =
Eint |{z}
interaction surface adsorbate
+ ∆Edefi + ∆Edefslab | {z }
(3)
deformation energy
9
Eint represents the interaction energy between the adsorbate and the surface. ∆Edefi is the
10
deformation energy of the molecule i, calculated as the difference in energy between the
11
isolated adsorbate in the distorted geometry and the adsorbate at its relaxed geometry (Eq
12
4). ∆Edefslab is the deformation energy of the surface defined as the difference in energy
13
between the slab in the distorted geometry of the slab-adsorbate system and the clean slab
14
(Eq 5):
∆Edefi = Edefi − Ei
(4)
∆Edefslab = Edefs − Eslab
(5)
15
In order to have a clear view of the electron redistribution induced by the bonding between
16
the adsorbed molecule and the surface, electron density difference plots were constructed
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based on the electron densities calculated by VASP:
∆ρ = ρi+slab − ρdefi − ρdefslab
(6)
2
where, ρi+slab is the electron density of the slab-adsorbate system, ρdefi is the electron density
3
of the adsorbate in the same (distorted) geometry but without the slab, and ρdefslab corre-
4
sponds to the electron density of the distorted geometry of the slab without the adsorbate.
5
Harmonic vibrational analysis for all final structures indicates that no imaginary fre-
6
quencies are present. Only for Fe7 C3 (001) and adsorbates with five carbon atoms or more
7
on θ-Fe3 C this could not be checked due to computational constraints.
8
Bulk structure
9
The selected iron carbide phases were χ-Fe5 C2 , Fe7 C3 , θ-Fe3 C and η-Fe2 C. For all phases,
10
XRD patterns match well experimental spectra (see Supporting Information Figures S6-S10).
11
For χ-Fe5 C2 , the selected initial bulk structure corresponds to a monoclinic structure
12
as reported by Retief et al. 49 After an optimization the final bulk resembles the pseudo-
13
monoclinic structure reported by du Plessis et al., 7 based on a comparison of calculated XRD
14
patterns (see Supporting Information Figures S6-S7). This slightly distorted monoclinic
15
structure, in which a different position of the C atoms causes the Fe atoms to be distorted
16
from their regular prismatic trigonal arrangement in the monoclinic structure, is the bulk
17
structure according to the latest experimental findings. 7 This failure of DFT methods to
18
predict the monoclinic χ-Fe5 C2 bulk structure has been previously addressed by de Smit et
19
al., 5 but in the light of the work of du Plessis et al. 7 the structure predicted by de Smit et
20
al. 5 was most likely the correct pseudo-monoclinic structure. The selected bulk unit cell of
21
χ-Fe5 C2 consist of 20 Fe atoms and 8 C atoms as illustrated in Figure 1a.
22
23
The Fe7 C3 phase is an orthorhombic structure with 28 Fe atoms and 12 C atoms per unit cell, see Figure 1b.
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Slab models
2
Low Miller index surfaces were considered in this study. The generated slabs are stoichio-
3
metric to their corresponding bulk. The slabs are symmetric with the top and bottom faces
4
equivalent. All the modelled surfaces were built from the previously optimized bulk struc-
5
tures and all the studied surfaces were constructed with a similar surface area (Figure 2)
6
ranging between 1 and 1.35 nm2 , within the limitations dictated by the bulk structure. In
7
this work, to describe the slabs, a layer of atoms is defined as the collection of atoms which
8
coordinates are within 100 pm, in direction perpendicular to the surface. Hence iron carbide
9
surfaces are modelled as intermixed layers of Fe and carbon atoms.
10
For the χ-Fe5 C2 the (010) surface is considered because Steynberg et al. 16 identified it as
11
stable in their DFT study of fourteen different low miller index surfaces, finding differences
12
in the surface energy between 0.1 till 0.8 J/m2 . Their main conclusion is however that
13
because a large number of χ-Fe5 C2 carbide surfaces share similar surface energies, there is no
14
most representative catalyst surface and several surfaces will coexist. For χ-Fe5 C2 (010) the
15
only two possible stoichiometric, symmetric slabs that can be built are the plane (010)0.00
16
and the plane (010)0.25 . In this case the plane 0.00 was selected because it offers larger
17
differences in surface structure compared with the other studied carbides (particularly the
18
θ-Fe3 C(001) surface). Steynberg et al. 16 reported the plane (010)0.25 as the most stable
19
surface termination, but the difference in surface energy between the plane 0.00 and 0.25 is
20
small with surface energies of 1.88 and 2.28 J/m2 , respectively. Hence, both surfaces can be
21
expected to coexist. 16 The (010)0.00 surface was modelled by a slab of 4 layers of Fe atoms
22
and 4 layers of C atoms, where the resulting top layer is not flat. The surface exposes 4 C
23
atoms and 20 Fe atoms per p(1×2) slab on its top layer, see Figure 2a.
24
Despite Fe7 C3 being reported as active phase for FTS, 1 there are no previous studies
25
that have determined the most predominant surface, and hence, the electronic surface energy
26
calculated in this work was used as the criterion to select a surface (Eq. 1). Among the
27
three different low miller index surfaces ((100), (010), (001)), the (001) has the lowest energy 9
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value with an electronic surface energy of 2.21 J/m2 , compared to 2.45 and 2.34 J/m2 for
2
(100) and (010), respectively. The unit cell for the surface (001) is composed by 4 layers of
3
C atoms and 7 layers of Fe and the surface exposes 28 Fe atoms and 4 C atoms per p(2×2)
4
slab. The resulting surface is not flat (Figure 2b).
5
Theoretical calculations have reported the θ-Fe3 C(001) surface as the most stable surface
6
among several low miller index surfaces. 20–22 It was modelled by a slab of 8 layers of Fe
7
atoms and 8 layers of C atoms and due to the position of the atoms in each layer, the
8
exposed surface is not flat. The surface exposes 4 C atoms and 24 Fe atoms per p(2×2) slab,
9
see Figure 2c.
10
η-Fe2 C(011) has been reported as the most stable surface under FTS, 4,23 but also here the
11
energy differences between the different planes are small. 23 The (011) surface was modelled
12
by a slab of 5 layers of Fe atoms and 2 layers of C atoms. Due to the position of atoms
13
in each layer the surface is not flat. The surface exposes 8 C atoms and 12 Fe atoms per
14
p(2×2) slab, see Figure 2d.
15
Previous studies have used small unit cells in their adsorption studies, for small molecules
16
(CHx , C2 H4 , CO, and H2 ). 1,19,24,25,28,29,31,54,55 However, in this work due to the larger size
17
of the adsorbates studied, the surface area of the unit cells should be sufficiently large to
18
calculate adsorption energies that only depend on the interactions between the adsorbate
19
and the surface. To set the minimum thickness required a convergence test for the adsorption
20
energy with respect to the slab thickness was carried out (Supporting information Table S2).
21
It was found that doubling the slab thickness for χ-Fe5 C2 (010)0.00 and η-Fe2 C(011) results
22
in methyl adsorptions energies at most 5 kJ/mol less negative than those found in the thin
23
slabs. For the thicker slabs of the Fe7 C3 (001) and θ-Fe3 C(001) surfaces, doubling the slab
24
was not possible due to computational constrains, but halving the slab thickness provides an
25
indication of the convergence with slab thickness. This indicates that the adsorption energies
26
are converged within 8 and 4 kJ/mol, respectively, meaning the results obtained on all slabs
27
can be considered reliable.
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To minimize the possible lateral interactions between adsorbates, several calculations
2
were performed for the adsorption of n-alkyl species on θ-Fe3 C(001) at different coverages.
3
The coverages were decreased keeping the stoichiometry of the unit cell constant, increasing
4
the supercell from p(1×1) to p(2×1) and p(2×2) (Supporting information Figures S11-
5
S13). Larger unit cells lead to lower coverage implying larger space between adsorbates on
6
the surface, which reduces the interaction between them. The p(2×2) supercell for the θ-
7
Fe3 C(001) surface was chosen to evaluate the effect of lateral interaction between successive
8
images but the resulting trends are expected to hold for the other phases as well because
9
of the large similarities between the different iron carbides. It was found that for a p(2×1)
10
supercell the adsorption energy is already converged within 2 kJ/mol with respect to the
11
p(2×2) supercell, even for the largest adsorbate susceptible to the most lateral interactions
12
(n-hexyl). Taking the p(2×2) supercell for the calculation of adsorption energies should
13
therefore be even more reliable to reduce any possible lateral interaction, compared to taking
14
the p(2×1) supercell. (Supporting information Figure S14-S16). As a result, the other unit
15
cells were built with similar area, within the limitations of their stoichiometry.
16
Results and discussion
17
The large number of different atoms present in the top layer of each surface leads to a large
18
amount of different possible positions on which a molecule can be adsorbed. Each atom in
19
the top layer represents a possible on-top site, the gap between each two atoms a bridge
20
position, and the space between n atoms an n-fold hollow site. For example, the surface
21
χ-Fe5 C2 (010) with fourteen different atoms at the surface leads to a number of 52 possible
22
configurations to evaluate (Supporting information Figures S17-S20).
23
In order to find the most stable configuration for the adsorption of n-alkyl, 1-alkene and
24
n-alkane species a screening was performed, for all the possible adsorption sites on each
25
surface. The screening was carried out using the following species per family: CH3 for n-
11
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coverages were 1.38×10−6 mol/m2 for χ-Fe5 C2 (010), 1.28×10−6 mol/m2 for Fe7 C3 (001),
2
1.23×10−6 mol/m2 for θ-Fe3 C(001), and 1.66×10−6 mol/m2 for η-Fe2 C(011). As stated
3
before, these coverages warrant sufficient space between neighbouring adsorbates from the
4
periodic model to guarantee no or almost no lateral interactions.
5
Adsorption of n-alkyls
6
n-alkyl species can adsorb in two distinct ways on the surface: horizontal or perpendicular to
7
the surface. To select the most stable adsorption geometry, the adsorption energy of C3 H7 on
8
χ-Fe5 C2 (010) was calculated with the molecule horizontal and perpendicular to the surface.
9
When the hydrocarbon chain is located horizontal to the surface the adsorption energy
10
amounts to -185 kJ/mol, while, for the hydrocarbon chain perpendicular to the surface,
11
the adsorption energy amounts to -206 kJ/mol. This difference in stability can partially be
12
explained based on the structure of the studied surfaces where the horizontal configurations
13
are only possible if the n-alkyl adopts a non-staggered conformation, in which the adsorbate
14
is destabilized due to the interactions in the hydrocarbon chain such as gauche interactions.
15
The configuration perpendicular to the surface allows to have a staggered hydrocarbon chain.
16
Moreover, it reduces the interaction between successive hydrocarbon chains in adjacent unit
17
cells particularly for larger chains. As a result, for the calculations of the adsorption energy,
18
the hydrocarbon chain was set in a staggered conformation perpendicular to the surface
19
(Figure 3).
20
For χ-Fe5 C2 (010), Fe7 C3 (001) and θ-Fe3 C(001) (Figures 3a, 3b and 3c), n-alkyl species
21
adsorb the strongest at bridge sites, located between two iron atoms. In the case of adsorption
22
on η-Fe2 C(011) the most stable adsorption site was on-top on a surface C atom (Figure 3d).
23
All configurations have similar structures with only small changes in the bond distance
24
between the adsorbed n-alkyl species and the iron atoms involved in the bonding to Fe1 and
25
Fe2 (Table 1).
26
For each surface the bond length between surface and adsorbate as well as the bond 13
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Table 1: Selected structural parameters of n-alkyl adsorbed species surface
species
χ-Fe5 C2 (010)
CH3 C2 H5 C3 H7 C4 H9 C5 H11 C6 H13 CH3 C2 H5 C3 H7 C4 H9 C5 H11 C6 H13 CH3 C2 H5 C3 H7 C4 H9 C5 H11 C6 H13
Fe7 C3 (001)
θ-Fe3 C(001)
η-Fe2 C(011)
CH3 C2 H5 C3 H7 C4 H9 C5 H11 C6 H13
dF e1 −C (pm) 209 209 209 209 209 209 219 221 220 220 220 220 214 213 213 213 213 213 dCs −C (pm) 153 153 152 153 153 153
dF e2 −C (pm) 230 232 232 231 231 231 221 223 223 223 223 223 244 244 244 244 244 244 dF e1 −C (pm) 204 205 204 204 204 204
∡F e1 CF e2 (◦ ) 71 70 70 70 70 71 82 80 81 81 81 81 68 67 67 67 67 67 ∡Cs CF e1 (◦ ) 58 58 58 58 58 58
1
previously been attributed to the presence of a larger interaction between the alkyl groups
2
and the surface than those between the H atoms of the CH3 and the surface. 56 In our opinion,
3
the discrepancy of CH3 is mainly due to the lower stability of the CH3 radical in the gas
4
phase compared to the C2 till C6 radicals, which are used as the gas phase reference for
5
the calculation of the adsorption energy. For instance, the difference in stability between
6
a CH3 and C2 H5 radical in gas phase amounts to 18.8 kJ/mol, 57 which is similar to the
7
difference between the calculated electronic adsorption energies of methyl and ethyl on all
8
surfaces except η-Fe2 C(011). Moreover, if dissociative adsorption energies would be shown,
15
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1
The obtained adsorption energies for C2 H5 adsorption on Fe7 C3 (-166 kJ/mol) and θ-
2
Fe3 C(001) (-174 kJ/mol), the Fe-richest surfaces, are similar to the value of -159 kJ/mol
3
experimentally determined for Fe(100) at 300 K. 58
4
Decomposition of the adsorption energy into the contribution of (i) actual chemical bond-
5
ing and (ii) deformation can provide a further insight into differences in bonding on the four
6
studied surfaces (Equations (3)-(5)). This calculation was limited to CH3 , C2 H5 and C3 H7
7
adsorption, assuming that the interaction energies for larger n-alkyl groups will have similar
8
trends. The obtained values are listed in Table 2. Table 2: Calculated interaction and deformation energies for CH3 , C2 H5 and C3 H7 adsorption on iron carbide surfaces, in which i refers to the corresponding adsorbed n-alkyl species surface
species
χ-Fe5 C2
CH3 C2 H5 C3 H7 CH3 C2 H5 C3 H7 CH3 C2 H5 C3 H7 CH3 C2 H5 C3 H7
Fe7 C3
θ-Fe3 C
η-Fe2 C
∆Edefi ∆Edefslab Eint ∆Eadsi (kJ/mol) (kJ/mol) (kJ/mol) (kJ/mol) 45 9 -270 -216 45 7 -252 -200 44 8 -256 -204 46 14 -246 -186 48 10 -224 -166 47 15 -234 -172 42 7 -238 -189 45 9 -228 -175 46 8 -234 -181 49 21 -271 -201 54 23 -278 -201 52 23 -279 -204
9
The calculated values show that the largest interaction energies still correspond to sur-
10
faces where the strongest adsorption energies were found, i.e. χ-Fe5 C2 (010) and η-Fe2 C(011).
11
Furthermore, the largest deformation energy for the molecule corresponds to the observed
12
deformation of the adsorbates on the surface (Supporting information Figures S21, S22 and
13
Tables S15-S18).
14
In order to visualize the redistribution of electrons upon adsorption, the difference in
15
electron density (∆ρ) was calculated for CH3 adsorption on the different surfaces, assuming
17
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that a similar behaviour will exist for larger n-alkyl species. The results are presented in
2
Figure 5.
18
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As shown by the magnitudes of the electron density difference, most of the electron
2
redistribution occurs in the bonding region between the CH3 group and the neighbouring
3
surface atoms. For the surfaces χ-Fe5 C2 (010), Fe7 C3 (001) and θ-Fe3 C(001) (Figures 5a, 5b
4
and 5c), the adsorbed molecule seems to be losing some electron density in order to create
5
two new bonds C-Fe1 and C-Fe2 . In the case of η-Fe2 C(011) the electron density lost by
6
the molecule seems to create only one bond with a carbon atom from the surface (C-Cs ).
7
Despite the C atom from the molecule and one of the irons from the surface being sufficiently
8
close for a bond to exist (204 pm), there is no charge redistribution between those two atoms
9
(Figure 5d), and therefore, adsorption on η-Fe2 C(011) can only be considered as a carbon
10
on-top position.
11
Adsorption of 1-alkenes
12
In the case of 1-alkenes two different adsorption modes, π and di-σ, are possible. A π-mode
13
was found to be most stable for the surface Fe7 C3 (001) and η-Fe2 C(011), whereas the di-
14
σ configuration is present on the surfaces χ-Fe5 C2 (010) and θ-Fe3 C(001). The calculated
15
adsorbed structures and their key bond parameters are given in Figure 6 and Tables 3 and
16
4, respectively.
17
In the π coordination mode (see Table 3) for the surfaces Fe7 C3 (001) and η-Fe2 C(011),
18
the first two carbon (C1 and C2 ) and hydrogen atoms from the adsorbed molecule are located
19
approximately in the same plane parallel to the surface, whereas the rest of the hydrocarbon
20
chain (in the case of larger chains) is perpendicular to the surface. In the case of C2 H4
21
adsorbed, the four H atoms have H-C-C angles of 121 ±1◦ , remaining as in the gas phase
22
molecule (121 ±1◦ ), while the internal angles H-C-H are 116±1◦ as compared to 120◦ in
23
the gas phase molecule (Supporting Information Figures S23 and S24). The C1 -C2 distance
24
is slightly elongated in comparison with the molecule in gas phase, increased from 133 pm
25
to 139 pm (Table 3), showing that the bond is weakened. The geometries of the obtained
26
modes agree with previously reported structures of C2 H4 adsorbed on θ-Fe3 C(100) in a π 20
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Table 3: Selected structural parameters of 1-alkenes adsorbed species at the most stable site in a π adsorption geometry for the Fe7 C3 (001) and η-Fe2 C(011) surfaces
C2 H4 C3 H6 C4 H8 C5 H10 C6 H12 C7 H14
dF e−C1 (pm) 218 220 219 220 220 220
dF e−C2 (pm) 219 225 224 223 223 223
dC1 −C2 (pm) 140 139 139 139 139 139
C2 H4 C3 H6 C4 H8 C5 H10 C6 H12 C7 H14
219 225 218 218 218 219
218 225 224 224 223 222
139 139 139 139 139 139
surface
species
Fe7 C3 (001)
η-Fe2 C(011)
1
For the di-σ configuration (see Table 4) the first two carbon atoms of the 1-alkene species
2
are bonded to two different Fe atoms of the surface. This configuration was found for the
3
surfaces χ-Fe5 C2 (010) and θ-Fe3 C(001) (Figures 6a and 6c). The C1 -C2 bond lengths increase
4
from 133 pm to 144 pm and 145 pm, still smaller than the 154 pm of a single C-C atom bond
5
(Table 4) but showing stronger bond weakening than for the π configuration. Moreover, the
6
angles of the four H atoms H-C-C are between 116◦ and 119◦ , which shows a modification
7
of the sp2 nature of the carbon atoms present in the molecule in gas phase towards a partial
8
sp3 character. The internal angles H-C1 -H and H-C2 -H are 113◦ (Supporting information
9
Figures S25 and S26), this configuration is similar to previously reported structures of C2 H4
10
adsorbed on a different surface plane (θ-Fe3 C(100)) in a di-σ mode. 55
11
On θ-Fe3 C(001), ethene (C2 H4 ) adsorbs in a different mode than the larger hydrocarbons,
12
called µ-bridging mode. µ-bridging is defined as the combination between a π adsorption
13
mode and two symmetric di-σ modes, in line with the definition previously reported for this
14
type of configuration. 55 A µ-bridging absorbed ethene is essentially π-bond, but the C2 H4
15
tilts such that both carbon atoms can also form a bond with the neighbouring Fe atom, 22
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Table 4: Selected structural parameters of 1-alkenes adsorbed species in a di-σ adsorption mode surface
species
χ-Fe5 C2 (010)
C2 H4 C3 H6 C4 H8 C5 H10 C6 H12 C7 H14
dF e1 −C1 (pm) 212 214 214 214 214 214
dF e1 −C2 (pm) 206 206 206 206 206 206
dF e2 −C1 (pm) 238 237 237 237 237 237
212 212 212 211 211 211
211 214 214 214 215 215
249 249 246 243 243 243 243
C2 H4 a C3 H6 C4 H8 C5 H10 C6 H12 C7 H14 a µ-bridging adsorption b dF e3 −C2
θ-Fe3 C(001)
b
dC1 −C2 (pm) 145 144 144 144 144 144 145 145 145 145 145 145
1
The adsorption energies of 1-alkene species decrease as the carbon chain increases, but
2
from a chain length of five on the adsorption energy remains almost constant with variations
3
of ±1 kJ/mol (Figure 8). Furthermore, the µ adsorption mode can be present on surfaces that
4
are smoother, where more interactions between the surface and the adsorbate are expected.
5
To provide more information about the differences in adsorption energy, deformation and
6
interaction energies were calculated for C2 H4 and C3 H6 (Table 5). Table 5: Calculated interaction and deformation energies for C2 H4 and C3 H6 adsorption on iron carbide surfaces,in which i refers to the corresponding adsorbed 1-alkene species surface
species
χ-Fe5 C2 (010)
C 2 H4 C 3 H6 C 2 H4 C 3 H6 C 2 H4 C 3 H6 C 2 H4 C 3 H6
Fe7 C3 (001) θ-Fe3 C(001) η-Fe2 C(011)
adsorption mode di-σ di-σ π π µ-bridge di-σ π π
∆Edefi (kJ/mol) 82 70 22 15 88 88 18 18
24
∆Edefslab (kJ/mol) 9 9 10 10 9 9 10 10
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Eint (kJ/mol) -209 -202 -109 -112 -187 -191 -99 -106
∆Eadsi (kJ/mol) -118 -123 -77 -87 -90 -95 -72 -86
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1
As shown in the electron density difference plot, the main redistribution of electron
2
density takes place in the bonding region between adsorbate and the surrounding atoms of
3
the surface. For the surfaces Fe7 C3 (001) and η-Fe2 C(011), on which 1-propene adsorbs in a π
4
adsorption mode (Figures 9b and 9d) the adsorbed molecule loses some electron density from
5
the region between the C1 and C2 in order to interact with a surface Fe atom. In the case
6
of the di-σ adsorption modes present in χ-Fe5 C2 (010) and θ-Fe3 C(001) there is an electron
7
density redistribution from the 1-propene molecule to the two iron atoms of the surface to
8
create new bonds (Figures 9a and 9c). In the case of the µ-bridging mode, present on the
9
C2 H4 adsorption on Fe3 C(001) surface, the electron density redistribution resembles the π
10
adsorption mode with a small redistribution of electron density from the two surface iron
11
atoms, which form the di-σ contribution (Supporting information Fig. S28).
12
Physisorption of n-alkane species
13
To study the physisorption of n-alkane species different assumptions were made in order to
14
overcome some technical difficulties. The main problem to study physisorbed molecules is
15
the lack of a strong interaction between surface and adsorbate, ergo, finding a solution that
16
fulfils the convergence criteria is difficult. On the other hand, the most stable way to adsorb
17
n-alkanes is parallel to the surface, however, this configuration leads to spatial limitation
18
problems, because the size of the surface unit cell is not sufficiently large to avoid the
19
interaction between neighbouring images of the periodic model, having a direct influence on
20
the adsorption energies. Therefore, these configurations were avoided. The results presented
21
in this work provide a qualitative insight about the adsorption trends of large n-alkanes.
22
For optimization, the n-alkanes are placed perpendicular to the iron carbide surfaces.
23
The final geometries obtained after relaxation remain perpendicular, with similar geometries
24
for the different studied slabs (Figure 10).
25
In Table 6 the reported distances between adsorbate and the surface are listed. The
26
reported values correspond to the distance between the first carbon atom of the hydrocarbon 27
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Table 6: Closest distance between n-alkanes physisorbed and the surface surface χ-Fe5 C2 (010)
Fe7 C3 (001)
θ-Fe3 C(001)
η-Fe2 C(011)
species CH4 C2 H6 C3 H8 C4 H10 C5 H12 C6 H14 CH4 C 2 H6 C 3 H8 C4 H10 C5 H12 C6 H14 CH4 C 2 H6 C 3 H8 C4 H10 C5 H12 C6 H14 CH4 C 2 H6 C 3 H8 C4 H10 C5 H12 C6 H14
d (pm) 351 352 352 351 351 351 388 385 385 360 360 363 342 330 320 320 317 317 369 369 353 353 353 350
1
The data in Table 6 show that for all the surfaces CH4 and C2 H6 are located slightly
2
further from the surface than larger hydrocarbon chains, which position for a chain length
3
> 3 remains almost constant on χ-Fe5 C2 (010), θ-Fe3 C(001) and η-Fe2 C(011). In the case
4
of the Fe7 C3 (001) surface, the changes in distance are more pronounced and the molecule is
5
located at a larger distance from the surface; this can be related to the lower smoothness of
6
the surface, leading to a higher number of adsorbate-surface interactions compared with the
7
other studied surfaces. Nonetheless, given the lack of an actual chemical bond between the
8
molecule and the neighbouring surface atoms, and the fact that mainly dispersive interactions
9
play a role in the physisorption of n-alkanes, it is difficult to establish a direct relation of
10
the effect of the surface on the physisorption strength. 29
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1
kJ/mol, calculated for η-Fe2 C(011) and θ-Fe3 C(001). 4
2
Conclusions
3
The adsorption of n-alkyls, 1-alkenes and n-alkanes was studied for different hydrocarbon
4
chain lengths using periodic DFT calculations. These species were adsorbed on four different
5
carbide phases considered active in FTS. The studies were carried out at low coverages.
6
For n-alkyl adsorption a bridge position between two iron atoms was found as the most
7
stable configuration for the χ-Fe5 C2 (010), Fe7 C3 (001) and θ-Fe3 C(001) surfaces, whereas, an
8
on-top position on a surface carbon atom was found as the most stable for η-Fe2 C(011). It
9
was found that the adsorption energy is correlated with the ratio of C/Fe atoms exposed in
10
the top layer of the iron carbide surface. As a result, surfaces with a larger carbon content
11
have a higher affinity for n-alkyl adsorption (χ-Fe5 C2 (010) and η-Fe2 C(011)).
12
The adsorption of 1-alkenes displays two different adsorption modes: π and di-σ. In
13
this case, adsorbed 1-alkenes in a di-σ mode are the most stable (χ-Fe5 C2 (010)0.00 and θ-
14
Fe3 C(001)).
15
n-alkane physisorption energies are similar for all the studied surfaces. Moreover it was
16
found that the morphology of the surface has an effect on the value of the physisorption en-
17
ergy, leading to the strongest physisorption energies on the smoothest surface (θ-Fe3 C(001)).
18
In all cases, it was found that adsorption energies do not depend on the length of the
19
hydrocarbon chain adsorbed after a particular chain length: three carbon members for n-
20
alkyl species, five for 1-alkenes and four for n-alkanes.
21
A commonly made hypothesis in Fischer-Tropsch microkinetic modelling is to assume
22
that adsorption energies are independent of chain length from a length of three carbons on.
23
This study confirms that the adsorption strength of hydrocarbon chains with more than 3
24
carbon atoms can indeed be considered to be independent of the hydrocarbon chain length
25
in good approximation when experimental or theoretical information is not available, but
31
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1
that for alkenes a better threshold amounts to a carbon chain length of five.
2
Acknowledgement
3
This work is undertaken in the context of the project “FASTCARD, FAST Industrialisa-
4
tion by CAtalysts Research and Development”. FASTCARD is a Large Scale Collabora-
5
tive Project supported by the European Commission in the 7th Framework Programme
6
(GA no 604277). For further information about FASTCARD see: http://www.sintef.no/
7
fastcard, and by the “Long Term Structural Methusalem Funding by the Flemish Gov-
8
ernment.” The computational resources (Stevin Supercomputer Infrastructure) and services
9
used in this work were provided by the VSC (Flemish Supercomputer Center), funded by
10
Ghent University, FWO and the Flemish Government-department EWI.
11
Supporting Information Available
12
Irreducible k-point grids in reciprocal space, relaxed and constrained atoms, calculated and
13
experimental lattice vectors of the different studied phases, calculated and experimental
14
XRD paterns, details on the effect of slab thickness over the adsorption energies, details on
15
the effect of coverage over the adsorption energies, detailed description of all the available
16
adsorption sites for the different studied surfaces, the results of screening for the preferential
17
adsorption sites for the different adsorbates in the simulations for all the studied surfaces,
18
structural parameters of CH3 , and C2 H5 adsorbed, structures of C2 H4 adsorbed and the
19
electron density distribution of C2 H4 adsorbed.
20
The following files are available free of charge.
21
• Supportinginfo.pdf: Supporting information file
22
This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org/.
32
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