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Unraveling Hydrogenation Kinetic Behavior of Transition Metal Oxides via Decoupling Dihydrogen Dissociation and Substrate Activation

Daowei Gao, Shuai Wang, Yipin Lv, Changxu Wang, Jianyu Ren, Peng Zheng, Lianghao Song, Aijun Duan, Xilong Wang, Guozhu Chen, Chunming Xu

2024ACS Catalysis25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Both noble metals and transition metal oxides are recognized as active centers for alkyne hydrogenation. However, it is still a “black box” how the catalytic behavior of oxides evolves upon the catalytic intervention of noble metals. Herein, we report a modularized strategy to track the hydrogenation mechanism of oxides (e.g., TiO 2, CeO 2, and ZrO 2 ) using a core–shell micromesoporous zeolite as a structure model, in which the oxide and noble metal (Pt) are functionally separated within a mesopore shell and a micropore core (TS-1 zeolite), respectively. The Pt species are atomically distributed and stabilized by the oxygen atoms of five-membered rings in TS-1 zeolite, which facilitates the heterolytic activation of dihydrogen over Pt δ+ ···O 2– units. The active hydrogen species, i.e., H + and H δ−, migrate to the oxide surface, where the adsorbed reactants are activated for hydrogenation. Mechanistic studies reveal that TiO 2, CeO 2, and ZrO 2 possess efficient hydrogenation properties at near-room temperature with the assistance of spillover hydrogen species, demonstrating dihydrogen dissociation as the main rate-limiting step for pure oxide. Impressively, the adsorbed H 2 O molecule on TiO 2, ZrO 2, and CeO 2 not only acts as a bridge of hydrogen spillover in reducing the proton diffusion barrier but also forms H 3 O + species on the TiO 2 (100) surface and endows TiO 2 with extraordinary hydrogenation properties. This work opens the “black box” for the hydrogenation behavior of transition metal oxides and develops a molecule-assisted strategy for the rational design of hydrogenation catalysts.

Topics & Concepts

CatalysisHydrogen spilloverDissociation (chemistry)Transition metalOxideNoble metalInorganic chemistryChemistryRhodiumHydrogenAdsorptionDehydrogenationMaterials sciencePhotochemistryPhysical chemistryOrganic chemistryNanomaterials for catalytic reactionsCatalytic Processes in Materials ScienceCatalysis and Hydrodesulfurization Studies