4.8 Article

Selective catalytic reduction of nitric oxide by ammonia over egg-shell MnOx/NaY composite catalysts

Journal

JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS
Volume 206, Issue 1, Pages 98-113

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1006/jcat.2001.3468

Keywords

SCR of NOx by NH3; egg-shell composite MnOx/NaY catalyst; low-temperature activity; laser Raman spectroscopy; DRIFT spectroscopy; temperature-programmed reduction

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A novel composite catalyst system for the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) of NOx by NH3 is described operating at temperatures lower than 470 K in the presence of water with NO conversions of 80-100% at space velocities of 30,000-50,000 h(-1). The catalyst is prepared by egg-shell precipitation of MnO2 on the external surface of zeolite NaY. Structural and thermal stability of precipitated MnO2 as well as of the MnO2/NaY composite catalyst were characterized by N-2 adsorption, X-ray diffraction, laser Raman spectroscopy, temperature-programmed reduction, and electron microscopy. MnO2 precipitated on zeolite NaY (15 wt% loading) retained its amorphous state up to calcination temperatures of 775 K. The zeolite component remained structurally intact. Calcination at higher temperatures destroyed the zeolite structure and transformed MnO2 into Mn3O4. DRIFT spectroscopic investigations revealed the presence of symmetric O=N-O-N=O species formally corresponding to N2O3 on the composite catalyst after contact with NO. Catalytic measurements under integral flow conditions showed that the catalyst performance is associated with a close coupling of nitrite formation and its drain off from equilibria with NO/NO2 and nitrate by ammonia. Several results are in line with the diazotation mechanism, including NH3 protonation to NH4+, whereas prevailing Lewis acid sites should enable NH3 activation via amide species, thus leading to a parallel amide/nitrosamide SCR reaction route. The activity-temperature profile fulfills the requirements of a low-temperature NOx, reduction catalyst for mobile diesel engines if an ammonia supply is implemented on board, e.g., by urea decomposition. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).

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