- Heterogeneous catalysis
Heterogeneous catalysis is a
chemistry term which describescatalysis where thecatalyst is in a different phase (ie.solid ,liquid andgas , but alsooil andwater ) to thereactants . Heterogeneous catalysts provide a surface for the chemical reaction to take place on.In order for the reaction to occur, one or more of the reactants must diffuse to the catalyst surface and
adsorb onto it. After reaction, the products must desorb from the surface and diffuse away from the solid surface. Frequently, this transport of reactants and products from one phase to another plays a dominant role in limiting thereaction rate . Understanding these transport phenomena andsurface chemistry such as dispersion is an important area of heterogeneous catalyst research. Catalyst surface area may also be considered.Mesoporous silicates , for example, have found utility as catalysts because their surface areas may be in excess of 1000 m2/g, which increases the probability that a reactant molecule in solution will come in contact with the catalyst surface and adsorb. If diffusion rates are not taken into account, the reaction rates for variousreactions on surfaces depend solely on the rate constants and reactant concentrations.Asymmetric heterogeneous catalysis can be used to synthesize enantiomerically pure compounds using chiral heterogeneous catalysts. [Heitbaum, Glorius, Escher, Asymmetric heterogeneous catalysis, "Angew. Chem. Int. Ed." 2006, "45", 4732.] The field is of great industrial and environmental importance. It has attracted two Nobel prizes forIrving Langmuir in 1932 andGerhard Ertl in 2007.Examples of Heterogeneous Catalysis Reactions
The synthesis of Ammonia is an example of heterogeneous catalysis:
3H2(g) + N2(g) ↔ 2NH3(g) - "catalysed by Fe(s)."
The use of
Nickel in thehydrogenation of vegetable oils to producemargarine . Theunsaturated fat present in the vegetable oils are converted tosaturated fat by the addition of hydrogen. This in turn breaks theCarbon-carbon double bond s. In order for this reaction to be catalysed effectively thenickel must present a large surface area so therefore must be finely divided.-CH=CH- + H2 → -CH2-CH2-
The cracking,
isomerisation and re-forming ofhydrocarbons to form appropriate and useful blends of Petrol.Catalytic Converters
These are often used in automobiles. Three main reactions are catalysed by
Catalytic converters .The
oxidation ofcarbon monoxide tocarbon dioxide .2CO(g) + O2(g) → 2CO2(g)
The
reduction ofnitrogen monoxide back tonitrogen .2NO(g) + 2CO(g) → N2(g) + 2CO2(g)
The
oxidation ofhydrocarbons to water and carbon dioxide. This can occur on any of thehydrocarbons however primarilyPetrol orDiesel .2C6H6(g) + 15O2 → 12CO2(g) +6H2O(l)
ee also
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Homogeneous catalysis "'References"'
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