Mareike
Liebertseder
a,
Di
Wang
b,
Gülperi
Cavusoglu
c,
Maria
Casapu
c,
Sheng
Wang
d,
Silke
Behrens
d,
Christian
Kübel
b,
Jan-Dierk
Grunwaldt
cd and
Claus
Feldmann
*a
aInstitute of Inorganic Chemistry (IAC), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Engesserstraße 15, D-76131 Karlsruhe, Germany. E-mail: claus.feldmann@kit.edu
bInstitute of Nanotechnology (INT), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Hermann-von-Helmholtz-Platz 1, 76344 Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen, Germany
cInstitute for Chemical Technology and Polymer Chemistry (ICTP), Engesserstraße 20, 76131 Karlsruhe, Germany
dInstitute of Catalysis Research and Technology (IKFT), Karlsruher Institute of Technology (KIT), Hermann-von-Helmholtz-Platz 1, 76344 Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen, Germany
First published on 11th January 2021
TiO2 hollow nanosphere (HNS) are prepared via NaCl templates in a one-pot approach. The NaCl templates are realized by solvent/anti-solvent strategies and coated with TiO2via controlled hydrolysis of Ti-alkoxides. The NaCl template can be easily removed by washing with water, and the TiO2 HNS are finally impregnated with Pd/Pt. Electron microscopy shows TiO2 HNS with an outer diameter of 140–180 nm, an inner cavity of 80–100 nm, and a wall thickness of 30–40 nm. The TiO2 HNS exhibit high surface area (up to 370 m2 g−1) and pore volume (up to 0.28 cm3 g−1) with well-distributed small Pd/Pt nanoparticles (Pt: 3–4 nm, Pd: 3–7 nm). H2O2 direct synthesis (room temperature, liquid phase) and CO oxidation (up to 300 °C, gas phase) are used to probe the catalytic properties and result in a good stability of the HNS structure as well as a promising performance with a H2O2 selectivity of 63% and a productivity of 3390 mol kgPd−1 h−1 (TiO2-Pd HNS, 5 wt%) as well as CO oxidation light-out temperatures of 150 °C (TiO2-Pt HNS, 0.7 wt%).
In regard of their high relevance for heterogeneous catalysis, various composite catalysts have been suggested, including multi-component compositions and sophisticated nanostructures.1–4,6 However, the realization of suitable nanocomposite catalysts often suffers from the fact that the nature of the active site and the specific interaction between metal oxide support and precious metal are still controversially discussed.7 Moreover, the nanocomposite catalyst needs to be chemically and structurally stable under the transient conditions of the respective reaction (e.g., in the gas phase or in the liquid phase), preferentially at elevated temperatures, as well as in the presence of moisture and reducing/oxidizing agents. In this regard, size, shape, surface area and porosity of the composite catalyst – including the metal oxide support and the deposited precious metal – play an important role. Here, new synthesis strategies and material concepts are desirable to realize composite catalysts with both high activity and high stability.
Hollow nanospheres (HNS), in principle, can provide promising features for catalysis due to their high surface area with outer surface, inner cavity and pores through the hollow sphere wall to optionally deposit precious metals.8 Certain HNS (e.g. CdSe) were also reported to have high mechanical and thermal stability.9 The synthesis of HNS is typically performed via microemulsion techniques, Kirkendall ripening or hard-template methods.8 Here, microemulsions suffer from low yields and sizes at the lower end of the nanoregime.8b Kirkendall ripening is only suitable in specific cases.8 Hard-template methods are promising in principle provided that the template, on which the later HNS is deposited, is easy to remove and that the synthesis is easy to perform. To this respect, we here suggest a one-pot synthesis of Pd/Pt-impregnated TiO2 HNS with a surface area of up to 370 m2 g−1, using nanosized NaCl templates. The resulting TiO2-Pd/Pt HNS show high activity for H2O2 direct synthesis in the liquid phase at 30 °C as well as for CO oxidation in the gas phase up to 300 °C.
H 2 O 2 direct synthesis was performed in a semi-continuous 300 mL batch reactor (30 °C, 40 bar). The TiO2-Pd HNS (25 mg TiO2 with 1.3 mg Pd per experiment) were suspended in ethanol as reaction medium (200 mL). Before starting the reaction, the catalyst suspension was activated with H2 (4 vol% in N2, 250 mLNTP min−1, 30 °C, 40 bar) for 1 h. Thereafter, the educt gas mixture (total flow: 250 mLNTP min−1; gas composition: H2/O2/N2 4:20:76) was introduced and stirring was started (1000 rpm). H2, O2 and N2 concentrations leaving the reactor were periodically determined by micro-GC (GC: gas chromatography). N2 was used as internal standard. The H2O2 concentration was analyzed ex situ by UV-Vis spectroscopy (ESI: Fig. S1†). H2 conversion and H2O2 selectivity were determined after 63 min of reaction. Each test was repeated. The catalysts were handled in air.
Fig. 2 Cube-like NaCl templates: (a–c) electron microscopy at different levels of magnification; (d) XRD (reference: ICDD-no. 075-0306). |
In principle, the deposition of a TiO2 shell on the NaCl template is straightforward and can be performed in a one-pot approach (Fig. 1). In detail, however, the polarity of surfaces and the speed of the TiO2 deposition become decisive. If, for instance, Ti(On-Bu)4 was used and hydrolyzed upon addition of a low amount of water to the NaCl suspension in THF, we could only obtain fluffy TiO2 with an incomplete coverage of the NaCl template (ESI: Fig. S3†). In a similar approach, Wang et al. have hydrolyzed Ti(On-Bu)4 on NaCl templates in glycerol as a highly viscous liquid phase.11 However, the resulting TiO2 hollow structures were micron-sized (2–4 μm) and contain granular thin TiO2 shells, which were not evaluated in regard of stability or catalytic properties. The formation of fluffy TiO2 in our approach can be ascribed to the low polarity of the NaCl surface in comparison to the highly polar surface of TiO2. Consequently, the adhesion of TiO2 on NaCl is low and – after formation of the very first TiO2 nuclei – all additional TiO2 adheres on the preformed TiO2 nuclei. In an improved synthesis approach, a small portion of water was first added to pre-dissolve the NaCl surface and to increase its polarity (Fig. 1). This pre-dissolution of NaCl afterwards is indicated on TEM images by a certain gap between the NaCl template and the TiO2 shell (Fig. 3). Thereafter, TiCl(Oi-Pr)3 was injected, which hydrolyzes much faster than Ti(On-Bu)4. As a result of both effects – the pre-hydrolyzed, more polar NaCl surface and the fast hydrolysis of the titania precursor – a uniform TiO2 shell of 30–40 nm in thickness was formed on the NaCl template (Fig. 3b and c).
Finally, the NaCl template was removed from the NaCl@TiO2 core–shell nanoparticles just by washing with water. The feasibility of this dissolution of course also points to the presence of pores through the TiO2 sphere wall, which can be expected taking the hydrolysis and TiO2 formation at room temperature into account. As a result, TiO2 HNS with an outer diameter of 140–180 nm, an inner cavity of 80–100 nm, and a wall thickness of 30–40 nm were obtained (Fig. 4a and b). TEM images clearly display the cube-shaped inner cavity remaining from the former NaCl template. EDX linescans confirm the presence of the hollow-sphere structure with a characteristic dip of the Ti and O concentration profile in the center of the TiO2 nanostructure (Fig. 4c and d). Moreover, the absence of Na/Cl-related signals indicates the removal of the NaCl template, which is important for catalytic studies, since especially chlorine may act as poison.
Fig. 4 TiO2 HNS: (a–c) electron microscopy at different levels of magnification; (d) EDXS linescan along the dotted red line in (c). |
Sorption analysis evidences the porosity of the TiO2 HNS and results in a high specific surface area of 370 m2 g−1 and a pore volume of about 0.28 cm3 g−1 (Table 1). In regard of the pore diameter, predominately micropores (≤8 Å and 10–20 Å) were observed (ESI: Fig. S4 and S5†). It should also be noticed that the specific surface area of fluffy TiO2 made from Ti(On-Bu)4 is even higher (454 m2 g−1, Table 1). In the literature, TiO2 was yet most often reported with specific surface areas <300 m2 (g−1).12 Higher values of around 300 m2 g−1 were only reported for nanorods and microspheres,13 or TiO2-SiO2 composite xerogels.14 The high porosity and surface area of the TiO2 HNS are here also reflected by a significant CO2 uptake (200 mg g−1) and a good selectivity in comparison to N2 (30 mg g−1) (ESI: Fig. S6†).
Material | Specific surface area/m2 g−1 | Pore volume/cm3 g−1 |
---|---|---|
TiO2 HNS (Ti(On-Bu)4, as-prepared) | 454 | 0.236 |
TiO2 HNS (Ti(On-Bu)4, 300 °C) | 19 | 0.015 |
TiO2 HNS (TiCl(Oi-Pr)3, as-prepared) | 371 | 0.280 |
TiO2 HNS (TiCl(Oi-Pr)3, 300 °C) | 284 | 0.194 |
TiO2-Pd HNS (TiCl(Oi-Pr)3, as-prepared) | 226 | 0.189 |
TiO2-Pt HNS (TiCl(Oi-Pr)3, 300 °C) | 181 | 0.193 |
H2O2 direct synthesis was performed with TiO2-Pd HNS (5 wt% Pd) suspended in ethanol at 30 °C and 40 bar. Prior to the reaction, the catalyst suspension was treated with reducing gas (H2:N2 = 4:96). Thereafter, the reaction gas mixture (H2:O2:N2 = 4:20:76) was introduced and stirring started (Fig. 5d–f). H2, O2 and N2 leaving the reactor were periodically analyzed using micro-GC. The H2O2 concentration was analyzed ex situ by UV-Vis spectroscopy.16 Accordingly, the as-prepared TiO2-Pd HNS exhibit a H2O2 selectivity of 47% with a productivity of 1850 mol kgPd−1 h−1 (Fig. 5e and f). Additionally, the TiO2-Pd HNS were exposed to air resulting in an instantaneous formation of PdO as indicated by its yellow color. This oxidized form is even more active with a selectivity of 63% and a productivity of 3390 mol kgPd−1 h−1 (Fig. 5e and f). These data belong to the highest values reported by now,3a,c,16 which points to the attractiveness of the HNS material concept even for monometallic catalyst systems. According to TEM and EDXS, the HNS structure and the homogenous Pd distribution also remain subsequent to the catalytic reaction (ESI: Fig. S14†).
Contrary to the H2O2 direct synthesis at room temperature in the liquid phase, the CO oxidation was chosen as an example of a catalytic reaction in the gas phase at elevated temperatures. Here, sintering effects of both the TiO2 HNS and the Pt nanoparticles become much more relevant and are typically observed during or after the 1st reaction cycle. CO oxidation activity was tested with the TiO2-Pt HNS catalyst (Fig. 6a–e, 0.7 wt% Pt, pre-treated in 5% H2 at 300 °C) deposited in quartz microreactors with good heat control (∅: 1.5 mm) at 30–400 °C with a gas mixture of 1000 ppm CO and 10% O2 in He at ambient pressure (Fig. 6f). The outlet gas composition was detected by mass spectrometry.
For the 1st cycle, a relatively high light-off temperature (50% of activity reached at 220 °C for the heating cycle) and a slow increase of the CO oxidation activity were observed (Fig. 6f, black arrow), which significantly changed to a sharp decrease and a light-out temperature of 153 °C (50% of activity reached for the cooling cycle, Fig. 6f, red arrow). This behavior can be ascribed to certain settling of the catalyst, including the removal of precursor traces and further crystallization of TiO2 (ESI: Fig. S15–S19†). During the 2nd reaction cycle (Fig. 6f, blue/green arrow), the TiO2-Pt HNS catalyst shows stable steep curves with light-off and light-out temperatures of 160 and 153 °C, respectively. These values lie within the typical conversion observed for similar catalysts and reaction parameters.15a,17 The appearance of a typical hysteresis in the CO oxidation profile is in line with the presence of Pt particles of about 3–4 nm in size (ESI: Fig. S15, S16 and S20†) as only particles <2 nm show an inverse hysteresis.15bEx situ X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectra collected before and after the light-off/light-out CO oxidation cycles indicate the presence of rather reduced Pt particles in the as-prepared sample and slightly more oxidized particles at the end of the catalytic test (70% present as Pt(0); ESI: Fig. S21†). These XANES data align very well with the sample treatment history, since the as-prepared catalyst was reduced at 300 °C in reducing gas prior to the CO oxidation measurement. Similar to the H2O2 direct synthesis, the HNS-based synthesis strategy and catalyst system lead to a promising performance, which in the first shot compares to the state-of-the-art.1
After treatment at 300 °C, the TiO2-Pt HNS (made from Ti(On-Bu)4) show certain sintering as indicated by the reduction of the specific surface area from 205 to 180 m2 g−1 (Table 1). Here, it also needs to be noticed that fluffy TiO2 (made from Ti(On-Bu)4) – originally with a very high surface area of 454 m2 g−1 – shows severe sintering at 300 °C, afterwards resulting in a poor value of only 19 m2 g−1 (Table 1). This finding again underlines the importance of the precursor and a controlled synthesis of the TiO2 HNS. With 180–200 m2 g−1 the surface area of the TiO2 HNS (made from TiCl(Oi-Pr)3) is still very high even after sintering. This aspect is often scarcely considered in the literature.11–14 For CO oxidation, it is also noteworthy that the size and size distribution of the Pt nanoparticles are stable up to 300 °C with many Pt nanoparticles of 3–4 nm in size (Fig. 6a–e). A noticeable growth of the Pt nanoparticles was actually only observed above 400 °C (ESI: Fig. S20†). Based on the feasibility of synthesis and materials concept, for both catalytic applications further improvement (e.g., optimization of the concentration of the noble metal, adjustment of thermal (pre-)treatment, catalyst durability tests) will be necessary and can further improve the catalytic activity.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Details of analytical techniques, synthesis procedure including catalytic H2O2 direct synthesis and CO oxidation, as well as further details related to the materials characterization. See DOI: 10.1039/d0nr08871d |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021 |