4.8 Article

Regioselective generation and reactivity control of subnanometric platinum clusters in zeolites for high-temperature catalysis

Journal

NATURE MATERIALS
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 866-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41563-019-0412-6

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Funding

  1. European Union through the European Research Council [ERC-AdG-2014-671093]
  2. Spanish government through the Severo Ochoa Programme [SEV-2016-0683]
  3. FEDER/MINECO [MAT2017-87579-R, MAT2016-81118-P]
  4. CAPES (Science without Frontiers) [13191/13-6]

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Subnanometric metal species (single atoms and clusters) have been demonstrated to be unique compared with their nanoparticulate counterparts. However, the poor stabilization of subnanometric metal species towards sintering at high temperature (>500 degrees C) under oxidative or reductive reaction conditions limits their catalytic application. Zeolites can serve as an ideal support to stabilize subnanometric metal catalysts, but it is challenging to localize subnanometric metal species on specific sites and modulate their reactivity. We have achieved a very high preference for localization of highly stable subnanometric Pt and PtSn clusters in the sinusoidal channels of purely siliceous MFI zeolite, as revealed by atomically resolved electron microscopy combining high-angle annular dark-field and integrated differential phase contrast imaging techniques. These catalysts show very high stability, selectivity and activity for the industrially important dehydrogenation of propane to form propylene. This stabilization strategy could be extended to other crystalline porous materials.

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