Hydrogen spillover, the migration of dissociated hydrogen atoms from noble metals to their support materials, is a ubiquitous phenomenon and is widely utilized in heterogeneous catalysis and hydrogen storage materials. However, in-depth understanding of the migration of spilled hydrogen over different types of supports is still lacking. Herein, hydrogen spillover in typical reducible metal oxides, such as TiO, CeO, and WO, was elucidated by combining systematic characterization methods involving various techniques, kinetic analysis, and density functional theory calculations. TiO and CeO were proven to be promising platforms for the synthesis of non-equilibrium RuNi binary solid solution alloy nanoparticles displaying a synergistic promotional effect in the hydrolysis of ammonia borane. Such behaviour was driven by the simultaneous reduction of both metal cations under a H atmosphere over TiO and CeO, in which hydrogen spillover favorably occurred over their surfaces rather than within their bulk phases. Conversely, hydrogen atoms were found to preferentially migrate within the bulk prior to the surface over WO. Thus, the reductions of both metal cations occurred individually on WO, which resulted in the formation of segregated NPs with no activity enhancement.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2sc00871h | DOI Listing |
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
December 2024
Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemical Science and Engineering (Tianjin), State Key Laboratory of Chemical Engineering, Haihe Laboratory of Sustainable Chemical Transformations, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Applied Catalysis Science and Engineering, School of Chemical Engineering & Technology, Tianjin University, Tianjin, 300072, P. R. China.
CO hydrogenation to methanol using green hydrogen derived from renewable resources provides a promising method for sustainable carbon cycle but suffers from high selectivity towards byproduct CO. Here, we develop an efficient PdZn-ZnO/TiO catalyst by engineering lattice dislocation structures of TiO support. We discover that this modification orders irregularly arranged atoms in TiO to stabilize crystal lattice, and consequently weakens electronic interactions with supported active phases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Mater
January 2025
State Key Laboratory of New Ceramics and Fine Processing, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, China.
Nitrate electroreduction is promising for achieving effluent waste-water treatment and ammonia production with respect to the global nitrogen balance. However, due to the impeded hydrogenation process, high overpotentials need to be surmounted during nitrate electroreduction, causing intensive energy consumption. Herein, a hydroxide regulation strategy is developed to optimize the interfacial HO behavior for accelerating the hydrogenation conversion of nitrate to ammonia at ultralow overpotentials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
Shandong university, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, No 27, Shandananlu,, 250100, Jinan, CHINA.
Rational regulation of active hydrogen (*H) behavior is crucial for advancing electrocatalytic nitrate reduction reaction (NO3RR) to ammonia (NH3), yet in-depth understanding of the *H generation, transfer, and utilization remains ambiguous, and explorations for *H dynamic optimization are urgently needed. Herein we engineer a Ni3N nanosheet array intimately decorated with Cu nanoclusters (NF/Ni3N-Cu) for remarkably boosted NO3RR. From comprehensive experimental and theoretical investigations, the Ni3N moieties favors water dissociation to generate *H, and then *H can rapidly transfer to the Cu via unique reverse hydrogen spillover mediating interfacial Ni-N-Cu bridge bond, thus increasing *H coverage on the Cu site for subsequent deoxygenation/hydrogenation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
January 2025
State Key Laboratory of Bio-Fibers and Eco-Textiles, College of Materials Science and Engineering, College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Qingdao University, Qingdao, 266071, P. R. China.
Adv Mater
January 2025
Key Laboratory for Soft Chemistry and Functional Materials (Ministry of Education), School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, School of Energy and Power Engineering, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, Nanjing, 210094, China.
Limited by the activity-selectivity trade-off relationship, the electrochemical activation of small molecules (like O, N and CO) rapidly diminishes Faradaic efficiencies with elevated current densities (particularly at ampere levels). Nevertheless, some catalysts can circumvent this restriction in a two-electron oxygen reduction reaction (2e ORR), a sustainable pathway for activating O to hydrogen peroxide (HO). Here we report 2e ORR expedited in a fluorine-bridged copper metal-organic framework catalyst, arising from the water spillover effect.
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