Litcius/Paper detail

Ni<sub>2</sub>P Nanoparticles Embedded in Mesoporous SiO<sub>2</sub> for Catalytic Hydrogenation of SO<sub>2</sub> to Elemental S

Xinnan Lu, Mark Baker, Dalaver H. Anjum, Georgia Basina, Steven J. Hinder, Wassilios Papawassiliou, Andrew J. Pell, Marina Karagianni, G. C. Papavassiliou, Dinesh Shetty, Dina Gaber, Safa Gaber, Yasser Al Wahedi, Kyriaki Polychronopoulou

2021ACS Applied Nano Materials20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Highly active nickel phosphide (Ni2P) nanoclusters confined in a mesoporous SiO2 catalyst were synthesized by a two-step process targeting tight control over the Ni2P size and phase. The Ni precursor was incorporated into the MCM-41 matrix by one-pot synthesis, followed by the phosphorization step, which was accomplished in oleylamine with trioctylphosphine at 300 °C so to achieve the phase transformation from Ni to Ni2P. For benchmarking, Ni confined by the mesoporous SiO2 (absence of phosphorization) and 11 nm Ni2P nanoparticles (absence of SiO2) was also prepared. From the microstructural analysis, it was found that the growth of Ni2P nanoclusters was restricted by the mesoporous channels, thus forming ultrafine and highly dispersed Ni2P nanoclusters (<2 nm). The above approach led to promising catalytic performance following the order u-Ni2P@m-SiO2 > n-Ni2P > u-Ni@m-SiO2 > c-Ni2P in the selective hydrogenation of SO2 to S. In particular, u-Ni2P@m-SiO2 exhibited SO2 conversions of 94% at 220 °C and ∼99% at 240 °C, which are higher than the 11 nm stand-alone Ni2P particles (43% at 220 °C and 94% at 320 °C), highlighting the importance of the role played by SiO2 in stabilizing ultrafine nanoparticles of Ni2P. The reaction activation energy Ea over u-Ni2P@m-SiO2 is ∼33 kJ/mol, which is lower than those over n-Ni2P (∼36 kJ/mol) and c-Ni2P (∼66 kJ/mol), suggesting that the reaction becomes energetically favored over the ultrafine Ni2P nanoclusters.

Topics & Concepts

NanoclustersPhosphideMesoporous materialOleylamineCatalysisMaterials scienceNanoparticleChemical engineeringNickelNanotechnologyChemistryMetallurgyOrganic chemistryEngineeringCatalysis and Hydrodesulfurization StudiesCatalytic Processes in Materials ScienceNanomaterials for catalytic reactions