Title of article :
The influence of reaction temperature on the chemical structure and surface concentration of active NOx in H2-SCR over Pt/MgOsingle bondCeO2: SSITKA-DRIFTS and transient mass spectrometry studies
Author/Authors :
Petros G. Savva، نويسنده , , Angelos M. Efstathiou، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Steady-state isotopic transient kinetic analysis (SSITKA), transient isothermal, and temperature-programmed surface reaction in H2 (H2-TPSR) techniques coupled with online mass spectroscopy (MS) and in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) were used to study essential mechanistic and kinetic aspects of the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) of NO with the use of H2 under strongly oxidizing conditions (H2-SCR) over a novel Pt/MgOsingle bondCeO2 catalyst. The main focus was to study and report for the first time the effects of reaction temperature on the chemical structure and surface concentration of the active NOx intermediate species thereby formed. The information obtained is essential to understanding the volcano-type profile of the catalyst activity versus reaction temperature observed here and also reported previously. In the present work, two active NOx intermediate species identified by SSITKA-DRIFTS were found in the nitrogen-reaction path toward N2 and N2O formation, one species located in the vicinity of the Ptsingle bondCeO2 support interface region (nitrosyl [NO+] coadsorbed with a nitrate [NO−3] species on an adjacent Ce4+single bondO2− site pair) and the second located in the vicinity of the Ptsingle bondMgO support interface region. The chemical structure of the second kind of active NOx species was found to depend on reaction temperature. In particular, the chemical structure was that of bidentate or monodentate nitrate (NO−3) at image and that of chelating nitrite (NO−2) at image. The concentration of the active NOx intermediates that lead to N2 formation was found to be practically independent of reaction temperature (120–300 °C) and significantly larger than 1 equivalent monolayer of surface Pt (image). The former result cannot be used to explain the volcano-type behavior of the catalytic activity versus the reaction temperature observed; alternative explanations are explored. The H-spillover process involved in the H2-SCR mechanism was found to be limited within a support region of about a 4–5 Å radius around the Pt nanoparticles (image).
Keywords :
metal-organic framework , Supported polyoxometalate , Co(II) , Composite materials , Selective oxidation , Ti(IV) , Alkene , Molecular oxygen , Hydrogen peroxide , MIL-101
Journal title :
Journal of Catalysis
Journal title :
Journal of Catalysis