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In situ spectroscopy and mechanistic insights into CO oxidation on transition-metal-substituted ceria nanoparticles

Authors :
Elias, J
Stoerzinger, K
Hong, W
Risch, M
Giordano, L
Mansour, A
Shao-Horn, Y
Elias J. S.
Stoerzinger K. A.
Hong W. T.
Risch M.
Giordano L.
Mansour A. N.
Shao-Horn Y.
Elias, J
Stoerzinger, K
Hong, W
Risch, M
Giordano, L
Mansour, A
Shao-Horn, Y
Elias J. S.
Stoerzinger K. A.
Hong W. T.
Risch M.
Giordano L.
Mansour A. N.
Shao-Horn Y.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Herein we investigate the reaction intermediates formed during CO oxidation on copper-substituted ceria nanoparticles (Cu0.1Ce0.9O2-x) by means of in situ spectroscopic techniques and identify an activity descriptor that rationalizes a trend with other metal substitutes (M0.1Ce0.9O2-x, M = Mn, Fe, Co, Ni). In situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) performed under catalytic conditions demonstrates that O2-transfer occurs at dispersed copper centers, which are redox active during catalysis. In situ XAS reveals a dramatic reduction at the copper centers that is fully reversible under catalytic conditions, which rationalizes the high catalytic activity of Cu0.1Ce0.9O2-x. Ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AP-XPS) and in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) show that CO can be oxidized to CO32- in the absence of O2. We find that CO32- desorbs as CO2 only under oxygen-rich conditions when the oxygen vacancy is filled by the dissociative adsorption of O2. These data, along with kinetic analyses, lend support to a mechanism in which the breaking of copper-oxygen bonds is rate-determining under oxygen-rich conditions, while refilling the resulting oxygen vacancy is ratedetermining under oxygen-lean conditions. On the basis of these observations and density functional calculations, we introduce the computed oxygen vacancy formation energy (Evac) as an activity descriptor for substituted ceria materials and demonstrate that Evac successfully rationalizes the trend in the activities of M0.1Ce0.9O2-x catalysts that spans three orders of magnitude. The applicability of Evac as a useful design descriptor is demonstrated by the catalytic performance of the ternary oxide Cu0.1La0.1Ce0.8O2-x, which has an apparent activation energy rivaling those of state-of-the-art Au/TiO2 materials. Thus, we suggest that cost-effective catalysts for CO oxidation can be rationally designed by judicious choice of substituting metal through the co

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308936904
Document Type :
Electronic Resource