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The catalysis of H2—D2 exchange by oxides
41
Citations
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References
1956
Year
Abstract H2—D2 exchange has been investigated a t the surfaces of 13 oxides of the first transition period, at temperatures between —195 and 20° C and pressures between 1 and 5 cm. There appears to be a simple correlation between the catalytic activity per unit surface area and the electronic configuration of the metal ion. The condition for high activity is that the oxide should possess some but not too many unpaired d-electrons. Thus, high activity occurs just after the beginning of the period (Cr2O3) and towards the end (Co3O4 and NiO). If there are no unpaired d-electrons (TiO2, V2O5, Cu2O, ZnO, Ga2O3, GeO2) or very few (V2O3, CuO) or very many (MnO, Fe2O3) the activity is low. A tentative explanation of the results is offered, mainly in terms of the influence of electronic configuration on the velocity of hydrogen chemisorption. The results suggest that hydrogen behaves similarly at metal and at oxide surfaces, giving catalysis by these solids a common motif. There is no simple correlation with oxides between exchange activity and semi-conductivity. Pressure dependences of the exchange velocity have been measured for Cr2O3, NiO, ZnO and Ga2O3; these throw some light on the question of the exchange mechanism.
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