The calcination temperature effect on CeO2 catalytic activity for soot oxidation: a combined experimental and theoretical approach
Abstract
The catalytic efficiency of CeO2 in soot oxidation was significantly affected by its grain morphology and calcination temperature. Nanocube-shaped and nanorod-shaped CeO2 catalysts were synthesized via a hydrothermal method with different calcination temperatures. Activity tests revealed that the nanorod-shaped CeO2 exhibited superior catalytic activity compared to the nanocube-shaped catalysts at equivalent calcination temperatures. Furthermore, an inverse relationship between the catalytic activity and the calcination temperature was observed in the nanorod-shaped CeO2 catalysts, with those calcined at 300 °C exhibiting the most effective low-temperature catalytic performance. Combined characterization techniques and density functional theory calculations showed that the improved catalytic performance can be attributed to the increased abundance of oxygen vacancies, enhanced lattice oxygen mobility and higher surface energy due to their unique surface defect structure and electronic structural feature, in addition to the reduction in grain size.