4.8 Article

Improving the Catalytic Performance of Cobalt for CO Preferential Oxidation by Stabilizing the Active Phase through Vanadium Promotion

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages 5369-5385

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.0c05482

Keywords

COPrOx; cobalt oxides; vanadium oxides; mixed oxides; operando spectroscopy; NAP-XPS; NEXAFS

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council (CSC)
  2. Strasbourg University via the IdEX2018 (Post-doctorants) project
  3. PRIN-2017 MOSCATo [2017KKP5ZR]

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The addition of vanadium can stabilize the active state of cobalt, enhancing the activity and stability of the COPrOx reaction. The active sites are mainly composed of a cobalt-vanadate surface layer, with the presence of V5+ and Co2+ ions helping to inhibit carbonate species formation.
Preferential oxidation of CO (COPrOx) is a catalytic reaction targeting the removal of trace amounts of CO from hydrogen-rich gas mixtures. Non-noble metal catalysts, such as Cu and Co, can be equally active to Pt for the reaction; however, their commercialization is limited by their poor stability. We have recently shown that CoO is the most active state of cobalt for COPrOx, but under certain reaction conditions, it is readily oxidized to Co3O4 and deactivates. Here, we report a simple method to stabilize the Co2+ state by vanadium addition. The V-promoted cobalt catalyst exhibits considerably higher activity and stability than pure cobalt. The nature of the catalytic active sites during COPrOx was established by operando NAP-XPS and NEXAFS, while the stability of the Co2+ state on the surface was verified by in situ NEXAFS at 1 bar pressure. The active phase consists of an ultra-thin cobalt-vanadate surface layer, containing tetrahedral V5+ and octahedral Co2+ cations, with an electronic and geometric structure that is deviating from the standard mixed bulk oxides. In addition, V addition helps to maintain the population of Co2+ species involved in the reaction, inhibiting carbonate species formation that are responsible for the deactivation. The promoting effect of V is discussed in terms of enhancement of CoO redox stability on the surface induced by electronic and structural modifications. These results demonstrate that V-promoted cobalt is a promising COPrOx catalyst and validate the application of in situ spectroscopy to provide the concept for designing better performing catalysts.

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