4.7 Article

Catalytic soot oxidation using hierarchical cobalt oxide microspheres with various nanostructures: Insights into relationships of morphology, property and reactivity

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 395, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2020.124939

Keywords

Soot; Co3O4; 3D nanostructure; Morphology; Catalysis; CO2

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST), Taiwan [109-2636-E-005-003]
  2. Innovation and Development Center of Sustainable Agriculture from The Featured Areas Research Center Program within Ministry of Education (MOE), Taiwan

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While diesel engines are extensively employed, soot from diesel engines lead to serious air pollution, which should be eliminated through catalytic soot oxidation processes. As Co3O4 represents a practical catalyst for oxidizing soot, it is critical to further investigate relationships of morphology-property-reactivity of Co3O4 catalysts for optimizing design of Co3O4 for soot oxidation. Thus, the present study, as the first attempt, aims to manipulate morphologies of Co3O4 microspheres to exhibit different surficial hierarchical nanostructures for comparing their corresponding catalytic activities. Specifically, four hierarchical Co3O4 microspheres (HCOMs) are fabricated, including Co3O4 with flower morphology (COF), Co3O4 with urchin morphology (COU), Co3O4 with sheet morphology (COS), and Co3O4 with pyramid morphology (COP), for comparisons in catalytic soot oxidation. The results indicate that these HCOMs showed much higher catalytic activities than the commercial spherical Co3O4 nanoparticles and most of reported cobalt-based catalysts as these HCOMs possessed high surface areas and porous nanostructures. In particular, among these HCOMs, COP stood out as the most advantageous HCOM for soot oxidation as COP contained more reactive surface and more superior redox properties than other HCOMs, thereby enabling COP to accelerate soot oxidation. These HCOMs could be also recyclable for soot oxidation over multiple cycles without loss of catalytic activities. These results and findings demonstrate that HCOMs are certainly promising cobaltic catalysts for oxidizing soot, and, through this present study, the relationship between morphologies, properties and catalytic activities can be correlated to provide important insights to design and apply hierarchically nanostructured Co3O4 catalysts for soot oxidation.

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