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FACULTY · WEB TOOLS

Bruce Gates
Photo of Dr. Gates email: bcgates@ucdavis.edu
Office: 3102 Bainer Hall
Phone: (530)752-3953
Distinguished Professor
B.S., 1961, University of California, Berkeley
Ph.D., 1966, University of Washington, Seattle

Research

Catalysis
Our program in catalysis research emphasizes fundamental investigations motivated by technologically important problems and close interactions with industry. The research involves catalyst preparation, characterization by physical methods, and testing in low- and high-pressure reactors.

Catalysis by structurally simple supported metal clusters:
Organometallic precursors are used to prepare structurally simple metal-oxide-supported metals, including single-metal-atom complexes, metal carbonyl clusters, and metal clusters. Examples include rhenium subcarbonyls on MgO and Ir4, Ir6, and Pt15 clusters on Alumina and in zeolites. The work is leading to fundamental understanding of the structure of the metal-support interface, the structures of metal clusters on supports, and the dependence of catalytic properties on cluster size and structure and the structure of the metal-support interface.

Solid superacid catalysts:
Solid superacids are being investigated that have activities for butane isomerization even at room temperature. These catalysts may provide the first practical routes to low-temperature paraffin isomerization for clean-burning gasoline.

Zeolite catalysts:
We are using ship-in-a-bottle syntheses as well as more conventional preparations to synthesize metal carbonyl clusters and metal clusters in zeolite cages. The materials include structurally simple catalysts (e.g., Ir4 in NaY zeolite) and very small metal clusters in zeolite L. We have been able to interconvert metal carbonyls such as [Ir6 (CO)16] and metal clusters such as Ir6. Our group has also investigated acidic zeolites such as HZSM-5 as paraffin conversion catalysts.

Novel supported bimetallic catalysts:
We are using organometallic precursors to prepare highly dispersed supported metal catalysts, including bimetallics. Examples include Pt-Mo catalysts supported on alumina, where the close proximity of the two metals may confer favorable properties on auto exhaust conversion catalysts.

Catalyst preparation by sol-gel methods:
The sol-gel technique gives precise control of the physical properties of amorphous metal oxides, but it has still found little application in catalyst preparation. We are investigating the effects of preparation variables on catalyst support properties made with organometallic precursors and using the method to prepare novel supported metal catalysts.

Experiments with powder and single-crystal samples:
Understanding of the properties of supported metal catalysts requires precise characterization of the structure, including the structure of the metal-support interface. Such understanding is emerging from characterizations of metals supported on single crystals of metal oxides with techniques including IR, EXAFS, NMR and other physical techniques.

Laboratories

Newly renovated laboratories are equipped with modern spectroscopic instruments and catalytic reactors. The laboratories meet modern safety standards, being fitted with gas detectors and alarms and large walk-in fume hoods for all the research with toxic and flammable chemicals. The instruments include the following:
Infrared spectrometer: Including FT Raman capability. UV-visible reflectance Spectrometer: Ultrahigh vacuum/normal pressure apparatus for chemisorption, surface area/pore volume, temperature-programmed reduction/oxidation/decomposition, and catalytic reaction measurements. Solid state NMR spectroscopy: A low-energy electron microscope/ultrahigh vacuum scanning tunneling microscope system will be operable in 1996.

Support

U.S. Department of Energy, Basic Energy
Sciences and Pittsburgh Energy Technology Center
Ford Motor Company
Los Alamos National Laboratory
National Science Foundation
W.M. Keck Foundation


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Chemical Engineering and Materials Science Department