11:00 AM - 11:15 AM
[MIS31-07] Controlling surface tunneling reactions of solid benzene via surface structure
Keywords:Aromatic hydrocarbons, hydrogenation, amorphous structure, crystalline structure, quantum tunneling, reaction control
C6H6 + H ➞ C6H7 Ea = 18.2 kJ mol-1, [R1]
C6H7 + H ➞ C6H8, [R2]
C6H8 + H ➞ C6H9 Ea = 6.3 kJ mol-1, [R3]
C6H9 + H ➞ C6H10, [R4]
C6H10 + H ➞ C6H11 Ea = 10.5 kJ mol-1, [R5]
C6H11 + H ➞ C6H12. [R6]
Ea is the activation barrier for H-atom addition in the gas phase. The radical recombination reactions R2, R4, and R6 are barrierless on the surface. In situ infrared spectroscopy revealed that cold H atoms can add to the amorphous benzene surface at 20 K to form cyclohexane (C6H12) by tunneling. However, hydrogenation of crystalline benzene is greatly suppressed. We suggest that the origin of the high selectivity of hydrogenation by tunneling is the difference of geometric constraints; that is, the presence of reactive dangling C6H6 molecules that lacks near neighbors on the amorphous C6H6 surface and the strong intermolecular steric hindrance on the crystalline C6H6. The present findings can lead us to a better understanding of heterogeneous reaction systems involving tunneling, and also provide the possibility of nonenergetic surface chemical modification without undesired side reactions or physical processes.