12 research outputs found

    Importance of hydrogen migration in catalytic ammonia synthesis over yttrium-doped barium zirconate-supported ruthenium nanoparticles: visualization of proton trap sites

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    Barium zirconate perovskites have been systematically investigated as protonic supports for ruthenium nanoparticles in the Haber-Bosch ammonia synthesis reaction. A series of supports based on barium zirconate were synthesized, for which the B-site of the ABO3 perovskite was doped with different aliovalent acceptor cations and in varying ratios, resulting in varying proton conductivities and trapping behaviors. Crucially, we provide direct evidence of the importance of a hydrogen-migration mechanism for ammonia synthesis over these proton-conducting materials from the studies of reaction kinetics, in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and neutron powder diffraction (NPD), which requires the proper balance of oxygen vacancy concentration (B-site doping), trapping-site concentration, and proton-hopping activation energy. We report evidence of a large dynamic coverage of OH groups on the support and the first visualization of both weak and strong proton trap sites within the perovskite lattice through the use of NPD

    High loading of transition metal single atoms on chalcogenide catalysts

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    Transition metal doped chalcogenides are one of the most important classes of catalysts that have been attracting increasing attention for petrochemical and energy related chemical transformations due to their unique physiochemical properties. For practical applications, achieving maximum atom utilization by homogeneous dispersion of metals on the surface of chalcogenides is essential. Herein, we report a detailed study of a deposition method using thiourea coordinated transition metal complexes. This method allows the preparation of a library of a wide range of single atoms including both noble and non-noble transition metals (Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Pt, Pd, Ru) with a metal loading as high as 10 wt % on various ultrathin 2D chalcogenides (MoS2, MoSe2, WS2 and WSe2). As demonstrated by the state-of-the-art characterization, the doped single transition metal atoms interact strongly with surface anions and anion vacancies in the exfoliated 2D materials, leading to high metal dispersion in the absence of agglomeration. Taking Fe on MoS2 as a benchmark, it has been found that Fe is atomically dispersed until 10 wt %, and beyond this loading, formation of coplanar Fe clusters is evident. Atomic Fe, with a high electron density at its conduction band, exhibits a superior intrinsic activity and stability in CO2 hydrogenation to CO per Fe compared to corresponding surface Fe clusters and other Fe catalysts reported for reverse water–gas-shift reactions

    Ceria nanocrystals supporting Pd for formic acid electrocatalytic oxidation: prominent polar surface metal support interactions

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    Ceria has been widely used as support in electrocatalysis for its high degree of oxygen storage, fast oxygen mobility, and reduction and oxidation properties at mild conditions. However, it is unclear what are the underlying principles and the nature of surface involved. By controlling the growth of various morphologies of ceria nanoparticles, it is demonstrated that the cubic-form of ceria, predominantly covered with higher energy polar surface (100), as support for Pd gives much higher activity in the electrocatalytic oxidation of formic acid than ceria of other morphologies (rods and spheres) with low-indexed facets ((110) and (111)). High-resolution transmission electron spectroscopy confirms the alternating layer-to-layer of cations and anions in (100) surface, and the electrostatic repulsion of oxygen anions within the same layers gives intrinsically higher oxygen vacancies on this redox active surface in order to reduce surface polarity. Density functional theory calculations suggest that the properties of fast oxygen mobility to reoxidize the CO-poisoned Pd may arise from the overdosed oxygens on these ceria surface layers during electro-oxidation hence sustaining higher activity

    Cooperative catalytically active sites for methanol activation by single metal ion-doped H-ZSM-5

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    Catalytic conversion of methanol to aromatics and hydrocarbons is regarded as a key alternative technology to oil processing. Although the inclusion of foreign metal species in H-ZSM-5 containing Brønsted acid site (BAS) is commonly found to enhance product yields, the nature of catalytically active sites and the rationalization for catalytic performance still remain obscure. Herein, by acquiring comparable structural parameters by both X-ray and neutron powder diffractions over a number of metal-modified ZSM-5 zeolites, it is demonstrated for the first time that active pairs of metal site-BAS within molecular distance is created when single and isolated transition metal cation is ion-exchanged with the zeolites. According to our DFT model, this could lead to the initial heterolytic cleavage of small molecules such as water and methanol by the pair with subsequent reactions to form products at high selectivity as that observed experimentally. It may account for their active and selective catalytic routes of small molecule activations

    Rational design of synergistic active sites for catalytic ethene/2-butene cross-metathesis in a rhenium-doped Y zeolite catalyst

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    Synthesizing atomically dispersed synergistic active pairs is crucial yet challenging in developing highly active heterogeneous catalysts for various industrially important reactions. Here, a single molecular Re species is immobilized on the inner surface of a Y zeolite with Brønsted acid sites (BASs) within atomic proximity to form Re OMS–BAS active pairs for the efficient catalysis of olefin metathesis reactions (OMS: olefin metathesis site). The synergy within the active pairs is revealed by studying the coadsorption geometry of the olefin substrates over the active pairs by synchrotron X-ray and neutron powder diffraction. It is shown that the BAS not only facilitates olefin adsorption but also aligns the olefin molecule to the Re OMS for efficient intermediate formation. Consequently, for the cross-metathesis of ethene and trans-2-butene to propene, this catalyst shows high activity under mild reaction conditions without observable deactivation. The catalyst outperforms not only traditional ReOx-based catalysts but also the best industrially applicable WOx-based catalyst thus far that we discovered previously. The concept of using two isolated active sites of different functionalities within atomic proximity in a confined cavity can provide opportunities for designing synergistically catalytic materials

    Fe on molecular-layer MoS2 as inorganic Fe-S-2-Mo motifs for light-driven nitrogen fixation to ammonia at elevated temperatures

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    Current industrial production of ammonia from the Haber-Bosch process and its transport concomitantly produces a large quantity of CO2. Herein, we successfully synthesize inorganic-structure-based catalysts with [Fe-S2-Mo] motifs with a connecting structure similar to that of FeMoco (a cofactor of nitrogenase) by placing iron atoms on a single molecular layer of MoS2 at various loadings. This type of new catalytic material functionally mimics the nitrogenase to convert N2 to ammonia and hydrogen in water without adding any sacrificial agent under visible-light illumination. Using the elevated temperature boosts the ammonia yield and the energy efficiency by one order of magnitude. The solar-to-NH3 energy-conversion efficiency can be up to 0.24% at 270°C, which is the highest efficiency among all reported photocatalytic systems. This method of ammonia production and the photocatalytic materials may open up an exciting possibility for the decentralization of ammonia production for fertilizer provision to local farmlands using solar illumination
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