2023-11-28
The development of selective catalysts for direct conversion of ammonia into nitrous oxide, N2O, will circumvent the conventional five-step manufacturing process and enable its wider utilization in oxidation catalysis. Deviating from commonly accepted catalyst design principles for this reaction, reliant on manganese oxide, we herein report an efficient system comprised of isolated chromium atoms (1 wt %) stabilized in the ceria lattice by coprecipitation. The latter, in contrast to a simple impregnation approach, ensures firm metal anchoring and results in stable and selective N2O production over 100 h on stream up to 79% N2O selectivity at full NH3 conversion. Raman, electron paramagnetic resonance, and in situ UV–vis spectroscopies reveal that chromium incorporation enhances the density of oxygen vacancies and the rate of their generation and healing. Accordingly, temporal analysis of products, kinetic studies, and atomistic simulations show lattice oxygen of ceria to directly participate in the reaction, establishing the cocatalytic role of the carrier. Coupled with the dynamic restructuring of chromium sites to stabilize intermediates of N2O formation, these factors enable catalytic performance on par with or exceeding benchmark systems. These findings demonstrate how nanoscale engineering can elevate a previously overlooked metal into a highly competitive catalyst for selective ammonia oxidation to N2O, paving the way toward industrial implementation.
Article
Versió publicada
Anglès
14 p.
ACS Publications
NCCR Catalysis (Grant number 180544), a National Centre of Competence in Research funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation
Generalitat de Catalunya and the European Union under Grant 2020-FI-B-00266
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, with ref no. PID2021-122516OB-I00, and the Severo Ochoa Grant (MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 CEX2019-000925-S)
Swiss National Science Foundation (Project no. 200021_196381)
CC-BY 4.0
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