Calcination conditions and stability of supported Ni4La oxide for catalytic decomposition of N2O
Abstract
A series of novel supported Ni4La oxide catalysts (S-Ni4La for short) with the same mass loading amount of 10%, using pretreated cordierite ceramics as carrier, was prepared by an impregnation method and tested for catalytic decomposition of N2O at low temperature. The effects of calcination temperature and atmosphere on the catalytic performance were mainly studied, and the stability of the S-Ni4La in reaction was evaluated. Meanwhile, the solid-phase structure, micro-structure morphology, redox properties, valence and content of ions were characterized by the techniques of XRD, SEM, H2-TPR, N2O-TPD and XPS, respectively. Moreover, the catalytic mechanism for N2O decomposition over the S-Ni4La was discussed. The results showed that the S-Ni4La calcined at 400 °C in a nitrogen atmosphere completely decomposed N2O at 375 °C, which successfully breaks the technical bottleneck that low-cost supported metal oxides were not able to completely decompose N2O at below 400 °C. La2O3 and LaNiO3 were not active phases for catalytic decomposition of N2O, while NiO was a major active phase in reaction. The reducing atmosphere decreased crystallization and refined the grain size, so as to increase the effective specific surface area, thereby improving the catalytic performance. Furthermore, the Lan+1NinO3n+1+σ formed possessed a perfect migration performance of oxygen species, particularly for the catalyst calcined in a nitrogen atmosphere, and consequently the S-Ni4La calcined in a nitrogen atmosphere revealed a much better catalytic performance.