4.6 Article

Integrated Cobalt Oxide Based Nanoarray Catalysts with Hierarchical Architectures: InSitu Raman Spectroscopy Investigation on the Carbon Monoxide Reaction Mechanism

Journal

CHEMCATCHEM
Volume 10, Issue 14, Pages 3012-3026

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cctc.201800363

Keywords

cobalt; oxidation; Raman spectroscopy; reaction mechanisms; structure-activity relationships

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Planning Project of Guangdong Province China [2015B0202236002]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51108187, 21401200, 51672273]
  3. National key R D plan [2017YFC0211503]
  4. Open Research Fund of State Key Laboratory of Multi-phase Complex Systems [MPCS-2017-D-06]

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Herein, a facile strategy for the insitu growth of a Co3O4-based precursor with unique hierarchical architectures oriented diagonal or perpendicular to Ni surfaces is reported. This strategy to prepare grafted ZIF-67@Co3O4 and MOF-199@Co3O4 precursor structures is based on a simple hydrothermal synthesis method to obtain the Co3O4 precursor and the subsequent insitu growth of ZIF-67 and MOF-199, respectively. The morphologies of the Co3O4 products can be tailored by controlling the solvent polarity and concentration of precipitants. CO is chosen as a probe molecule to evaluate the catalytic performance of the as-synthesized Co3O4-based oxide catalysts, and the structure-activity relationships are confirmed by using TEM, H-2 temperature-programmed reduction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy and insitu Raman spectroscopy, and extended X-ray absorption fine structure analysis. These analysis results demonstrate that irislike Co3O4 exhibits a high catalytic activity for CO oxidation and contains an abundance of surface defect sites (Co3+ species) to result in an excellent low-temperature reducibility, oxygen vacancies and unsaturated chemical bonds on the surface. Moreover, we used insitu Raman spectroscopy to record the structural transformation of Co3O4 directly during the reaction, which confirmed that CO oxidation on the surface of Co3O4 can proceed through the Langmuir-Hinshelwood mechanism (<200 degrees C) and the Mars-vanKrevelen mechanism (>200 degrees C).

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