The interaction of the metal and support in oxide-supported transition-metal catalysts has been proven to have extremely favorable effects on catalytic performance. Herein, mesoporous Co3O4, NiO, MnO2, Fe2O3, and CeO2 were synthesized and utilized in CO oxidation reactions to compare the catalytic activities before and after loading of 2.5 nm Pt nanoparticles. Turnover frequencies (TOFs) of pure mesoporous oxides were 0.0002–0.015 s(–1), while mesoporous silica was catalytically inactive in CO oxidation. When Pt nanoparticles were loaded onto the oxides, the TOFs of the Pt/metal oxide systems (0.1–500 s(–1)) were orders of magnitude greater than those of the pure oxides or the silica-supported Pt nanoparticles. The catalytic activities of various Pt/oxide systems were further influenced by varying the ratio of CO and O2 in the reactant gas feed, which provided insight into the mechanism of the observed support effect. In situ characterization using near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (NEXAFS) and ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS) under catalytically relevant reaction conditions demonstrated a strong correlation between the oxidation state of the oxide support and the catalytic activity at the oxide–metal interface. Through catalytic activity measurements and in situ X-ray spectroscopic probes, CoO, Mn3O4, and CeO2 have been identified as the active surface phases of the oxide at the interface with Pt nanoparticles.
Hydrogenations of CO or CO2 are important catalytic reactions as they are interesting alternatives to produce fine chemical feedstock hence avoiding the use of fossil sources. Using monodisperse nanoparticle (NP) catalysts, we have studied the CO/H2 (i.e., Fischer-Tropsch synthesis) and CO2/H2 reactions. Exploiting synchrotron based in situ characterization techniques such as XANES and XPS, we were able to demonstrate that 10 nm Co NPs cannot be reduced at 250 °C while supported on TiO2 or SiO2 and that the complete reduction of cobalt can only be achieved at 450 °C. Interestingly, cobalt oxide performs better than fully reduced cobalt when supported on TiO2. In fact, the catalytic results indicate an enhancement of 10-fold for the CO2/H2 reaction rate and 2-fold for the CO/H2 reaction rate for the Co/TiO2 treated at 250 °C in H2 versus Co/TiO2 treated at 450 °C. Inversely, the activity of cobalt supported on SiO2 has a higher turnover frequency when cobalt is metallic. The product distributions could be tuned depending on the support and the oxidation state of cobalt. For oxidized cobalt on TiO2, we observed an increase of methane production for the CO2/H2 reaction whereas it is more selective to unsaturated products for the CO/H2 reaction. In situ investigation of the catalysts indicated wetting of the TiO2 support by CoO(x) and partial encapsulation of metallic Co by TiO(2-x).
Carbon dioxide capture and use as a carbon feedstock presents both environmental and industrial benefits. Here we report the discovery of a hybrid oxide catalyst comprising manganese oxide nanoparticles supported on mesoporous spinel cobalt oxide, which catalyses the conversion of carbon dioxide to methanol at high yields. In addition, carbon-carbon bond formation is observed through the production of ethylene. We document the existence of an active interface between cobalt oxide surface layers and manganese oxide nanoparticles by using X-ray absorption spectroscopy and electron energy-loss spectroscopy in the scanning transmission electron microscopy mode. Through control experiments, we find that the catalyst's chemical nature and architecture are the key factors in enabling the enhanced methanol synthesis and ethylene production. To demonstrate the industrial applicability, the catalyst is also run under high conversion regimes, showing its potential as a substitute for current methanol synthesis technologies.
Here, we report the Pt nanoparticle mediated reduction (oxidation) and lattice expansion (contraction) of mesoporous CeO 2 under H 2 (O 2 ) atmospheres and in the temperature range of 50−350 °C. We found that CeO 2 in the Pt/CeO 2 catalyst was partially reduced in H 2 (and fully oxidized back in O 2 ) as demonstrated by several in situ techniques: APXPS spectra (4d core levels) for the topmost surface, NEXAFS total electron yield spectra (at the M 5,4 edges) in the near surface regions, and (N)EXAFS fluorescence spectra (at the L 3 edge) in the bulk. Moreover, XRD and EXAFS showed the reversible expansion and contraction of the CeO 2 unit cell in H 2 and O 2 environments, respectively. The expansion of the CeO 2 cell was mainly associated with the formation of oxygen vacancies as a result of the Pt-mediated reduction of Ce 4+ to Ce 3+ . We also found that pure mesoporous CeO 2 can not be reduced in H 2 under identical conditions but can be partially reduced at above 450 °C as revealed by APXPS. The role of Pt in H 2 was identified as a catalytic one that reduces the activation barrier for the reduction of CeO 2 via hydrogen spillover.
The hydrogenation of crotonaldehyde by platinum nanoparticles supported on cobalt oxide was used as a reaction to probe the effect of the interface between the two materials on the activity and selectivity of the catalyst. Four potential products can be formed by this reaction: propylene, butyraldehyde, crotyl alcohol, and butanol. When Pt nanoparticles are supported on SiO 2 , an inert support, only propylene and butyraldehyde are formed. However, when Pt is supported on cobalt oxide, the alcohols make up roughly 40% of the total activity, indicating that cobalt oxide plays a pivotal role in the reaction, much like other active supports such as TiO 2 . To elucidate the mechanism of alcohol formation, in situ sum frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy (SFG) and ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AP-XPS) were utilized to probe the reactant adsorption and intermediate formation and the chemical state of the materials under working catalytic conditions. The SFG data indicate that crotonaldehyde adsorbs on the oxide surface, likely through the aldehyde oxygen as well as on the Pt surface through the alkene group. AP-XPS results show that the surface of the Co 3 O 4 support becomes partially reduced under the reaction conditions and Pt exists in its metallic state. Taking these results together, we propose that the crotonaldehyde adsorbs at reduced oxide surface sites and that this adsorption mode is responsible for the production of alcohol products. A platinum nanoparticle density dependence study was also undertaken to change the abundance of interface sites and study their effect on the reaction. The selectivity between the two alcohol products was altered as a function of the Pt nanoparticle density: higher selectivity toward butanol and lower selectivity toward crotyl alcohol was obtained with increasing density, while propylene and butyraldehyde selectivities were constant with respect to density. On the basis of the data presented, we propose that butanol is preferentially formed at the metal−oxide interface, while crotyl alcohol is formed at oxide surface sites by reaction with spillover hydrogen.
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