March 18, 2004
Journal Article

Thermal Chemistry of Trimethyl Acetic Acid on TiO2(110)

Abstract

Based on temperature programmed desorption and isothermal reaction mass spectrometry, the thermal surface chemistry of trimethyl acetic acid, (CH3)3CCOOH, dosed onto a well characterized single crystal TiO2(110) surface is described. Deprotonation occurs at or below 300 K to form trimethyl acetate, (CH3)3CCOO-, and hydroxide, OH-. (CH3)3CCOO- is bound to exposed Ti4? cations and OH- involves a bridging oxygen atom of the substrate. Based on temperature programmed desorption and isothermal reaction mass spectrometry, the desorbing products include (CH3)3CCOOH, isobutene (i-C4H8), carbon monoxide and water accompanied by smaller amounts of other products including methyl isopropenyl ketone (CH2=C(CH3)C(=O)CH3), isobutane (i-C4H10), and di-t-butyl ketone, (CH3)3CC(=O)C(CH3)3. Much of the (CH3)3CCOO- is relatively stable and decomposes to release mainly carbon monoxide and isobutene above 550 K with a maximum rate at 660 K. Thermal desorption to 750 K leaves a carbon-free surface that is indistinguishable from the initially clean surface. During dosing at 550 K, a steady-state reaction condition is realized with about half the adsorption sites being occupied at any instant.

Revised: November 10, 2005 | Published: March 18, 2004

Citation

White J.M., J. Szanyi, and M.A. Henderson. 2004. Thermal Chemistry of Trimethyl Acetic Acid on TiO2(110). Journal of Physical Chemistry B 108, no. 11:3592-3602. PNNL-SA-40464.