4.7 Article

Efficient synergistic catalysis of chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons and NOx over novel low-temperature catalysts: Nano-TiO2 modification and interaction mechanism

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 315, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.137640

Keywords

Honeycomb-type catalyst; 2-Dichlorobenzene; In -situ DRIFT; Catalytic mechanism; 1; NH3-SCR

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A novel VOx-CeOx-WOx/TiO2 catalyst was studied for efficient and synergistic removal of chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons and NOx at low temperatures. The catalyst showed excellent oxygen storage/release capacity and desirable 1,2-DCB conversion efficiency. The nano-TiO2 modification slightly impaired the 1,2-DCB oxidation but enhanced NO conversion by improving catalyst reducibility.
For efficient and synergistic elimination of chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g., dioxins and chlorobenzenes) and NOx at low temperatures, a novel VOx-CeOx-WOx/TiO2 catalyst was systemically studied, involving the nano-TiO2 modification and the interaction mechanism between 1,2-dichlorobenzen (1,2-DCB) catalytic oxidation (DCBCO) and NH3-SCR. The VOx-CeOx-WOx/TiO2 performed excellent oxygen storage/release capacity (OSRC) and desirable 1,2-DCB conversion efficiency (95.1-97.4%) at 160-200 degrees C via M-K and L-H mechanism. The nano-TiO2 modification slightly impaired the 1,2-DCB oxidation to 93.6-96.2% owing to the reduced surface area and Bronsted acidity, while it distinctly enhanced NO conversion and lowered the T50 (from 162 to 112 degrees C) and T90 (from 232 to 205 degrees C) by improving catalyst reducibility. Based on further synergistic catalysis evaluation and in-situ DRIFT analysis, NO enhanced the 1,2-DCB conversion and complete oxidation capacity of VOx-CeOx-WOx/TiO2 by promoting active oxygen (O2-, O-, O2-) generation and improving 1,2-DCB chemosorption and subsequent oxidation. In detail, the produced HCl and H2O improved the catalyst acidity and promoted the formation of HONO and HNO3. Moreover, their generation not only facilitated the chemisorption of NH3 but also participated in the NH3-SCR via L-H mechanism. The ensuing problem was the competitive chemisorption among 1,2-DCB, NH3, and their subsequent intermediates. As a result, NH3 had distinct advantages in competing for acid sites and active oxygen species, especially at the higher temperature, resulting in the improved NO conversion with elevated reaction temperature but the reduced 1,2-DCB conversion. The results

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available