Cargando…

Different morphologies on Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with NH(3) and DRIFTS study on sol–gel nanoparticles

The copper–cerium binary oxide catalysts supported by titanium dioxide with nanosphere core–shell structures, nanotube (TNT) core–shell structures, impregnation (imp) nanoparticles and sol–gel nanoparticles were prepared for NH(3)-SCR of NO(x) under medium-low temperature conditions. The effect of d...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zhuang, Ke, Jin, Pengkai, Yang, Liu, Yao, Jie, Yu, Lemeng, Sheng, Zhongyi, Chu, Xinyue, Zhuang, Zhipeng, Chen, Xiongbo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10472399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37664208
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra03018k
_version_ 1785100068713398272
author Zhuang, Ke
Jin, Pengkai
Yang, Liu
Yao, Jie
Yu, Lemeng
Sheng, Zhongyi
Chu, Xinyue
Zhuang, Zhipeng
Chen, Xiongbo
author_facet Zhuang, Ke
Jin, Pengkai
Yang, Liu
Yao, Jie
Yu, Lemeng
Sheng, Zhongyi
Chu, Xinyue
Zhuang, Zhipeng
Chen, Xiongbo
author_sort Zhuang, Ke
collection PubMed
description The copper–cerium binary oxide catalysts supported by titanium dioxide with nanosphere core–shell structures, nanotube (TNT) core–shell structures, impregnation (imp) nanoparticles and sol–gel nanoparticles were prepared for NH(3)-SCR of NO(x) under medium-low temperature conditions. The effect of different morphologies on the Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts was comprehensively studied through physicochemical characterization. The results showed that the sol–gel nanoparticles exhibited 100% NO(x) reduction efficiency in the temperature range of 180–400 °C. Compared with the other catalysts, the sol–gel nanoparticle catalyst had the highest dispersion and lowest crystallinity, indicating that morphology played an important role in the NH(3)-SCR of the catalyst. The in situ DRIFTS study on the sol–gel nanoparticle catalyst shows that cerium could promote Cu(2+) to produce abundant Lewis acid sites, which would significantly increase the adsorption reaction of ammonia on the catalyst surface, thereby promoting the occurrence of the Eley–Rideal (E–R) mechanism. With the Ce–Ti interaction on the atomic scale, the Ce–O–Ti structure enhanced the redox properties at a medium temperature. In addition, cerium oxide enhances the strong interaction between the catalyst matrix and CuO particles. Therefore, the reducibility of the CuO species was enhanced.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10472399
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher The Royal Society of Chemistry
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-104723992023-09-02 Different morphologies on Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with NH(3) and DRIFTS study on sol–gel nanoparticles Zhuang, Ke Jin, Pengkai Yang, Liu Yao, Jie Yu, Lemeng Sheng, Zhongyi Chu, Xinyue Zhuang, Zhipeng Chen, Xiongbo RSC Adv Chemistry The copper–cerium binary oxide catalysts supported by titanium dioxide with nanosphere core–shell structures, nanotube (TNT) core–shell structures, impregnation (imp) nanoparticles and sol–gel nanoparticles were prepared for NH(3)-SCR of NO(x) under medium-low temperature conditions. The effect of different morphologies on the Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts was comprehensively studied through physicochemical characterization. The results showed that the sol–gel nanoparticles exhibited 100% NO(x) reduction efficiency in the temperature range of 180–400 °C. Compared with the other catalysts, the sol–gel nanoparticle catalyst had the highest dispersion and lowest crystallinity, indicating that morphology played an important role in the NH(3)-SCR of the catalyst. The in situ DRIFTS study on the sol–gel nanoparticle catalyst shows that cerium could promote Cu(2+) to produce abundant Lewis acid sites, which would significantly increase the adsorption reaction of ammonia on the catalyst surface, thereby promoting the occurrence of the Eley–Rideal (E–R) mechanism. With the Ce–Ti interaction on the atomic scale, the Ce–O–Ti structure enhanced the redox properties at a medium temperature. In addition, cerium oxide enhances the strong interaction between the catalyst matrix and CuO particles. Therefore, the reducibility of the CuO species was enhanced. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10472399/ /pubmed/37664208 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra03018k Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Zhuang, Ke
Jin, Pengkai
Yang, Liu
Yao, Jie
Yu, Lemeng
Sheng, Zhongyi
Chu, Xinyue
Zhuang, Zhipeng
Chen, Xiongbo
Different morphologies on Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with NH(3) and DRIFTS study on sol–gel nanoparticles
title Different morphologies on Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with NH(3) and DRIFTS study on sol–gel nanoparticles
title_full Different morphologies on Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with NH(3) and DRIFTS study on sol–gel nanoparticles
title_fullStr Different morphologies on Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with NH(3) and DRIFTS study on sol–gel nanoparticles
title_full_unstemmed Different morphologies on Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with NH(3) and DRIFTS study on sol–gel nanoparticles
title_short Different morphologies on Cu–Ce/TiO(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of NO(x) with NH(3) and DRIFTS study on sol–gel nanoparticles
title_sort different morphologies on cu–ce/tio(2) catalysts for the selective catalytic reduction of no(x) with nh(3) and drifts study on sol–gel nanoparticles
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10472399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37664208
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3ra03018k
work_keys_str_mv AT zhuangke differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles
AT jinpengkai differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles
AT yangliu differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles
AT yaojie differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles
AT yulemeng differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles
AT shengzhongyi differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles
AT chuxinyue differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles
AT zhuangzhipeng differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles
AT chenxiongbo differentmorphologiesoncucetio2catalystsfortheselectivecatalyticreductionofnoxwithnh3anddriftsstudyonsolgelnanoparticles