Morphological impact of 1-dimensional to 3-dimensional manganese dioxides on catalytic ozone decomposition correlated with crystal facets and lattice oxygen mobilities†
Abstract
Ozone is a pollutant that has received widespread attention in recent years, and manganese dioxide (MnO2) has been widely used for catalytic ozone decomposition. However, few studies have described the structure–activity correlation of different morphological types of MnO2. In this study, a series of MnO2 crystals (α-, β-, γ-, δ-, ε- and λ-MnO2) were synthesized, and their catalytic activities on ozone decomposition (25 °C, dry air) were comparatively studied, which exhibited the order ε-MnO2 > α-MnO2 > γ-MnO2 > β-MnO2 ≈ δ-MnO2 > λ-MnO2. XRD and HRTEM results confirmed their diversities on the exposed crystal planes. It was confirmed that ε-MnO2 with the (1 0 2) plane had the largest number of oxygen vacancies and the best oxygen mobility. These findings elucidated the favorable performance of ε-MnO2 in the aforementioned tests. DFT calculations revealed the reaction mechanism, showing that ε-MnO2 has the lowest energy barrier for the rate-determining O22− desorption step (2.04 eV). This work illustrated the crucial role of oxygen vacancies and the mobility of lattice oxygen, shedding light on the strategies for rational design and control synthesis of effective catalysts for ozone elimination.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Environmental Remediation