Molecules (Apr 2023)

DRIFTS-MS Investigation of Low-Temperature CO Oxidation on Cu-Doped Manganese Oxide Prepared Using Nitrate Aerosol Decomposition

  • Xingfan Gong,
  • Jiacheng Xu,
  • Tiantian Zhang,
  • Yan Sun,
  • Shiyu Fang,
  • Ning Li,
  • Jiali Zhu,
  • Zuliang Wu,
  • Jing Li,
  • Erhao Gao,
  • Wei Wang,
  • Shuiliang Yao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules28083511
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 8
p. 3511

Abstract

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Cu-doped manganese oxide (Cu–Mn2O4) prepared using aerosol decomposition was used as a CO oxidation catalyst. Cu was successfully doped into Mn2O4 due to their nitrate precursors having closed thermal decomposition properties, which ensured the atomic ratio of Cu/(Cu + Mn) in Cu–Mn2O4 close to that in their nitrate precursors. The 0.5Cu–Mn2O4 catalyst of 0.48 Cu/(Cu + Mn) atomic ratio had the best CO oxidation performance, with T50 and T90 as low as 48 and 69 °C, respectively. The 0.5Cu–Mn2O4 catalyst also had (1) a hollow sphere morphology, where the sphere wall was composed of a large number of nanospheres (about 10 nm), (2) the largest specific surface area and defects on the interfacing of the nanospheres, and (3) the highest Mn3+, Cu+, and Oads ratios, which facilitated oxygen vacancy formation, CO adsorption, and CO oxidation, respectively, yielding a synergetic effect on CO oxidation. DRIFTS-MS analysis results showed that terminal-type oxygen (M=O) and bridge-type oxygen (M-O-M) on 0.5Cu–Mn2O4 were reactive at a low temperature, resulting in-good low-temperature CO oxidation performance. Water could adsorb on 0.5Cu–Mn2O4 and inhibited M=O and M-O-M reaction with CO. Water could not inhibit O2 decomposition to M=O and M-O-M. The 0.5Cu–Mn2O4 catalyst had excellent water resistance at 150 °C, at which the influence of water (up to 5%) on CO oxidation could be completely eliminated.

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