(628c) Pushing the Limits of Precious Metal Atom Economy for Three-Way-Catalysts (TWC): Thermally Stable and Highly Active Single Rh Atom Catalysts (Rh1/ceria) for NO Abatement
AIChE Annual Meeting
2020
2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
Emissions Control II: NOx Reduction and Hydrocarbon Oxidation
Thursday, November 19, 2020 - 8:30am to 8:45am
We show for the first time that single positively-charged Rh atoms on ceria, prepared via high-temperature atom trapping synthesis, are the highly active species for (CO+NO) reaction both under dry and wet, industrial conditions. This provides a direct link between organometallic homogeneous Rh(I) complexes capable of catalyzing (CO+NO) reaction and supported Rh single atoms, the latter being much more active than their homogeneous analogues. Decreasing the Rh loading to 0.1 wt% leads to a catalyst with uniform Rh ions on the surface of ceria, which is very active (full NO conversion >120 â°C, TOF per Rh atom at 120 â°C ~ 330 hr-1) and thermodynamically stable. Under dry conditions, the main product above 100 â°C is N2 with N2O being the minor product. Water promotes low-temperature activity of 0.1 Rh/CeO2 starting 50 â°C with full NO conversion above 125 â°C in the wet stream. In this case, however, ammonia and nitrogen are the main products with only minor N2O amounts. NH3 formation at such relatively low temperatures is attractive because of the potential to use this as a passive SCR system. Because of the uniformity of Rh ions on the support, we are able to clarify the mechanistic aspects of this reaction. More specifically, we show that ammonia formation correlates with the WGS activity of the material and thus, rhodium hydride Rh-H species are believed to be involved in this reaction. These findings provide new mechanistic understanding for the catalytically active species in TWC catalysis and open up a new avenue for the synthesis of industrially relevant emissions control catalysts with 100% atom economy of ultra-expensive precious metals such as Rh.