TY - JOUR
T1 - Selective Hydrogenation on a Highly Active Single-Atom Catalyst of Palladium Dispersed on Ceria Nanorods by Defect Engineering
AU - Li, Zhijun
AU - Dong, Xiuli
AU - Zhang, Mingyang
AU - Leng, Leipeng
AU - Chen, Wenxing
AU - Horton, J. Hugh
AU - Wang, Jun
AU - Li, Zhijun
AU - Wu, Wei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/12/23
Y1 - 2020/12/23
N2 - Single-atom catalysis represents a new frontier that integrates the merits of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis to afford exceptional atom efficiency, activity, and selectivity for a range of catalytic systems. Herein we describe a simple defect engineering strategy to construct an atomically dispersed palladium catalyst (Pdδ+, 0 < δ< 2) by anchoring the palladium atoms on oxygen vacancies created in CeO2 nanorods. This was confirmed by spherical aberration correction electron microscopy and extended X-ray absorption fine structure measurement. The as-prepared catalyst showed exceptional catalytic performance in the hydrogenation of styrene (99% conversion, TOF of 2410 h-1), cinnamaldehyde (99% conversion, 99% selectivity, TOF of 968 h-1), as well as oxidation of triethoxysilane (99% conversion, 79 selectivity, TOF of 10 000 h-1). This single-atom palladium catalyst can be reused at least five times with negligible activity decay. The palladium atoms retained their dispersion on the support at the atomic level after thermal stability testing in Ar at 773 K. Most importantly, this synthetic method can be scaled up while maintaining catalytic performance. We anticipate that this method will expedite access to single-atom catalysts with high activity and excellent resistance to sintering, significantly impacting the performance of this class of catalysts.
AB - Single-atom catalysis represents a new frontier that integrates the merits of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis to afford exceptional atom efficiency, activity, and selectivity for a range of catalytic systems. Herein we describe a simple defect engineering strategy to construct an atomically dispersed palladium catalyst (Pdδ+, 0 < δ< 2) by anchoring the palladium atoms on oxygen vacancies created in CeO2 nanorods. This was confirmed by spherical aberration correction electron microscopy and extended X-ray absorption fine structure measurement. The as-prepared catalyst showed exceptional catalytic performance in the hydrogenation of styrene (99% conversion, TOF of 2410 h-1), cinnamaldehyde (99% conversion, 99% selectivity, TOF of 968 h-1), as well as oxidation of triethoxysilane (99% conversion, 79 selectivity, TOF of 10 000 h-1). This single-atom palladium catalyst can be reused at least five times with negligible activity decay. The palladium atoms retained their dispersion on the support at the atomic level after thermal stability testing in Ar at 773 K. Most importantly, this synthetic method can be scaled up while maintaining catalytic performance. We anticipate that this method will expedite access to single-atom catalysts with high activity and excellent resistance to sintering, significantly impacting the performance of this class of catalysts.
KW - ceria nanorods
KW - heterogeneous catalysis
KW - hydrogenation
KW - large-scale production
KW - palladium single atom
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85097748521&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.0c17009
DO - 10.1021/acsami.0c17009
M3 - Article
C2 - 33296190
AN - SCOPUS:85097748521
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 12
SP - 57569
EP - 57577
JO - ACS applied materials & interfaces
JF - ACS applied materials & interfaces
IS - 51
ER -