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Applied Catalysis A: General, Vol.148, No.2, 213-252, 1997
Methanol Oxidation as a Catalytic Surface Probe
The goal of this review is to present some aspects of the use of a test reaction, i.e., methanol oxidation, as a tool to characterize oxidation catalysts. The selectivity pattern and the formation rates of the reaction products are used to characterize both structural (dispersion) as well as chemical properties (acid-base and redox) on supported oxide catalysts, especially for molybdenum-based systems supported on silica and vanadia on titanium oxide. This highly sensitive technique which gives information on the catalytically active sites at the molecular level characterizes a catalyst at work and is particularly well-adapted to the study of supported catalysts.
Keywords:TEMPERATURE-PROGRAMMED DESORPTION;SUPPORTED MOLYBDENUM OXIDE;SINGLE-CRYSTAL SURFACES;BRANNERITE-TYPE VANADATES;VANADIUM-OXIDE;STRUCTURE SENSITIVITY;MO/SIO2 CATALYSTS;METHYL FORMATE;FT-IR;HETEROPOLY COMPOUNDS