Ultra-small CeO2 nanoparticles supported on SiO2 for indoor formaldehyde oxidation at low temperature
Abstract
Formaldehyde (HCHO) elimination is very important for air cleaning in indoor spaces because it is a human carcinogen. HCHO oxidation over an oxide catalyst is more practical for large-scale applications than using a noble catalyst, but the activity is a big challenge at low temperature. One strategy to improve the activity is to fabricate ultra-small oxide nanocrystals that exhibit a size effect. In this work, ceria nanoparticles with a size of around 2.5 nm were synthesized. The nanoparticles are some of the smallest ceria nanocrystals that have been developed. Compared with ceria aggregates and bulk materials, the ultra-small ceria nanoparticles exhibited excellent performance for HCHO elimination, where HCHO was fully oxidized at 523 K under dry and moist conditions at a high gas hourly space velocity. The superior performance was assigned to the remarkable oxygen vacancies in the ultra-small ceria nanoparticles that have the ability to activate O2. This work demonstrates the importance of ceria size control for achieving abundant oxygen vacancies for low temperature HCHO oxidation, which might also be applicable to other catalysts for oxidation reactions.