Pt-Fe+2O sites directly responsible for ambient temperature catalytic oxidation activity as discovered by operando XAS

30 September 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) identified that the concentration of Fe2+ species in the working state-of-the-art Pt-FeOx catalysts quantitatively correlates to their preferential carbon monoxide oxidation (PROX) steady-state reaction rate at ambient temperature. Deactivation of such catalysts with time on stream originates from irreversible oxidation of active Fe2+ sites. The active Fe2+ species are presumably Fe+2O-2 clusters in contact with platinum nanoparticles; they coexist with spectator trivalent oxidic iron (Fe3+) and metallic iron (Fe0) partially alloyed with platinum. Concentration of active sites and, therefore, the catalyst activity strongly depends on the pretreatment conditions. Fe2+ is the resting state of the active sites in the PROX cycle.

Keywords

heterogeneous catalysis
operando
Pt-Fe
structure-activity relationships
X-ray absorption spectroscopy

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information Pt-Fe+2O sites directly responsible for ambient temperature catalytic oxidation activity as discovered by operando XAS
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