Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
January 2025
Pd speciation induced by the combined effect of CO and water on Pd/SSZ-13 samples prepared by both impregnation and ion exchange was examined by FT-IR spectroscopy of CO adsorbed at room temperature and at liquid nitrogen temperature on anhydrous and hydrated samples. Starting from the literature findings related to the CO reducing effect on Pd cations, the present work gives precise spectroscopic evidences on how water is necessary in this process not only for compensating with H the zeolite exchange sites set free by Pd reduction, but also for mobilizing isolated Pd/Pd cations and making possible the reduction reactions. The aggregation of some Pd sites, just formed by the reduction and mobilized by the hydration, gives rise to the formation of PdO particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLewis acid sites (LAS) and Brønsted-Lowry acid sites (BAS) play key roles in many catalytic processes, particularly in the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) of nitrogen oxides with ammonia. Here we show that temperature, gas feed, and catalyst composition affect the interplay between LAS and BAS on vanadia-based materials under SCR-relevant conditions. While different LAS typically manifest as a single collective peak in the steady-state spectra, their individual signals could be isolated through the increased sensitivity of transient experimentation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of water, in the temperature range 25-350 °C, and ammonia at RT on two different surface species formed on Pt-K/Al2O3 and Pt-Ba/Al2O3 NSR catalysts during NO(x) storage-reduction cycles was investigated. The surface species involved are nitrates, formed during the NO(x) storage step, and isocyanates, which are found to be intermediates in N2 production during reduction by CO. FT-IR experiments demonstrate that the dissociative chemisorption of water and ammonia causes the transformation of the bidentate nitrates and linearly bonded NCO(-) species into more symmetric species that we call ionic species.
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