4.8 Article

Water Enables Lattice Oxygen Activation of Transition Metal Oxides for Volatile Organic Compound Oxidation

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 12, Issue 18, Pages 11272-11280

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.2c03552

Keywords

transition metal oxides; H2O; lattice oxygen activation; HCHO oxidation; oxygen vacancy

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2019YFC1806203]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21976066, 21872061]

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This study systematically investigates the mechanism of water in lattice oxygen activation of transition metal oxides. It demonstrates that water molecules can activate lattice oxygen to form hydroxyl species and attack electron-deficient carbon atoms of VOCs due to their strong nucleophilicity. This research is of great significance for understanding the role of water in catalysis, such as VOC combustion and water splitting.
A small amount of water can enhance the catalytic combustion activity of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) on transition metal oxides (TMOs), but its intrinsic mechanism is still controversial. Herein, we systematically demonstrate that water molecules can constantly activate lattice oxygen of transition metal oxides to form hydroxyl species theoretically and experimentally. The oxygen atoms of the generated hydroxyl species possess a weak bonding strength with circumjacent metal atoms to easily escape from the surface and attack electron-deficient carbon atoms of VOCs due to their comparatively stronger nucleophilicity, leaving abundant oxygen vacancies as the active sites for subsequent molecular oxygen activation. This work helps us deeply understand the role of water in lattice oxygen activation of transition metal oxides and provides direction for water-related catalysis, such as catalytic VOC combustion, water splitting, water-gas shift reactions, and corrosion.

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