Investigation of the effect of thermal annealing of Ni-cobaltite nanoparticles on their structure, electronic properties and performance as catalysts for the total oxidation of dimethyl ether†
Abstract
Herein, we report the influence of thermal annealing on the structural and redox properties, optical band gap (EOptg) and electrical conductivity (σ) of Ni-doped Co3O4 nanoparticles (NPs). The influence of annealing on the catalytic performance is also studied. Coprecipitation technique was employed to prepare single oxides (Ni2O3 and Co3O4) and Ni-cobaltite oxides (NiCo2O4), which were annealed at different temperatures. The samples were characterized in terms of structure (XRD), surface specific area (SBET), morphology (SEM), chemical composition (EDS/XPS), redox properties (H2-TPR), optical band gap (EOptg) and conductivity σ. In addition, the conversion of dimethyl ether (DME) was achieved over all samples at low temperature. Overall, NiCo2O4 exhibits outstanding catalytic behaviour, surpassing single oxides. However, a notable difference in performance among NiCo2O4 samples was observed. The catalytic behaviour is discussed with respect to the quality of reducibility, the ratio of active species (OLat/OAds), the lowest EOptg and the good σ. H2-TPR, EOptg and σ analysis were used to gain a deeper insight into the reaction process occurring at the surface of each of the catalysts. NiCo2O4 samples annealed at 450 and 500 °C cannot be reduced in the reaction temperature range (150 to 225 °C), suggesting that the process occurs via a surface mechanism. However, NiCo2O4 annealed at 350 °C is reduced under the reaction conditions within the temperature range from 200 to 350 °C, attesting that DME oxidation proceeds through an intrafacial redox process in this case. Using density functional theory (DFT) calculations, the adsorption and dissociation of DME on the catalytically relevant NiCo2O4 (001) surface was investigated. DME adsorbs preferentially on top the Co3+ site in a degenerate state: intact and single dehydrogenated molecules have very similar binding energies (−0.76 eV and −0.77 eV, respectively). The presence of surface vacancies in the vicinity of the adsorption site leads to the most interesting catalytic pathway. The activation energy for the dehydrogenation of one DME carbonyl group, considered as the first step to the complete oxidation, shows a lower value on the half-metallic surface with vacancies (0.9 eV) compared to 1.5 eV on the vacancy-free metallic surface.