Elucidating the Nature of the Cu(I) Active Site in CuO/TiO2 for Excellent Low-Temperature CO Oxidation

Stabilized Cu+ species have been widely considered as catalytic active sites in composite copper catalysts for catalytic reactions with industrial importance. However, few examples comprehensively explicated the origin of stabilized Cu+ in a low-cost and widely investigated CuO/TiO2 system. In this...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied materials & interfaces 2020-02, Vol.12 (6), p.7091-7101
Hauptverfasser: Fang, Yarong, Chi, Xiao, Li, Li, Yang, Ji, Liu, Shoujie, Lu, Xingxu, Xiao, Wen, Wang, Liming, Luo, Zhu, Yang, Weiwei, Hu, Siyu, Xiong, Juxia, Hoang, Son, Deng, Hongtao, Liu, Fudong, Zhang, Lizhi, Gao, Puxian, Ding, Jun, Guo, Yanbing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Stabilized Cu+ species have been widely considered as catalytic active sites in composite copper catalysts for catalytic reactions with industrial importance. However, few examples comprehensively explicated the origin of stabilized Cu+ in a low-cost and widely investigated CuO/TiO2 system. In this study, mass producible CuO/TiO2 catalysts with interface-stabilized Cu+ were prepared, which showed excellent low-temperature CO oxidation activity. A thorough characterization and theoretical calculations proved that the strong charge-transfer effect and Ti–O–Cu hybridization in Ti-doped CuO(111) at the CuO/TiO2 interface contributed to the formation and stabilization of Cu+ species. The CO molecule adsorbed on Cu+ and reacted directly with Ti doping-promoted active lattice oxygen via a Mars–van Krevelen mechanism, leading to the enhanced low-temperature activity.
ISSN:1944-8244
1944-8252
DOI:10.1021/acsami.9b18264