Abstract

Three typical Mn-based bimetallic nanocatalysts of Mn−Fe/TiO2, Mn−Co/TiO2, Mn−Ce/TiO2 were synthesized via the hydrothermal method to reveal the synergistic effects of dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) plasma and bimetallic nanocatalysts on NOx catalytic conversion. The plasma-catalyst hybrid catalysis was investigated compared with the catalytic effects of plasma alone and nanocatalyst alone. During the catalytic process of catalyst alone, the catalytic activities of all tested catalysts were lower than 20% at ambient temperature. While in the plasma-catalyst hybrid catalytic process, NOx conversion significantly improved with discharge energy enlarging. The maximum NOx conversion of about 99.5% achieved over Mn−Ce/TiO2 under discharge energy of 15 W·h/m3 at ambient temperature. The reaction temperature had an inhibiting effect on plasma-catalyst hybrid catalysis. Among these three Mn-based bimetallic nanocatalysts, Mn−Ce/TiO2 displayed the optimal catalytic property with higher catalytic activity and superior selectivity in the plasma-catalyst hybrid catalytic process. Furthermore, the physicochemical properties of these three typical Mn-based bimetallic nanocatalysts were analyzed by N2 adsorption, Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), H2-temperature-programmed reduction (TPR), NH3-temperature-programmed desorption (TPD), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The multiple characterizations demonstrated that the plasma-catalyst hybrid catalytic performance was highly dependent on the phase compositions. Mn−Ce/TiO2 nanocatalyst presented the optimal structure characteristic among all tested samples, with the largest surface area, the minished particle sizes, the reduced crystallinity, and the increased active components distributions. In the meantime, the ratios of Mn4+/(Mn2+ + Mn3+ + Mn4+) in the Mn−Ce/TiO2 sample was the highest, which was beneficial to plasma-catalyst hybrid catalysis. Generally, it was verified that the plasma-catalyst hybrid catalytic process with the Mn-based bimetallic nanocatalysts was an effective approach for high-efficiency catalytic conversion of NOx, especially at ambient temperature.

Highlights

  • Nitrogen oxides (NOx ) are regard as the main air pollutant contributing to acid rain, photochemical smog, greenhouse effects, and ozone depletion [1]

  • The physicochemical properties of these three typical Mn-based bimetallic nanocatalysts were analyzed by Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), H2 -temperature-programmed reduction (TPR), NH3 -temperature-programmed desorption (TPD) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), in order to expose the relationship between structures and activities

  • For all the tested Mn-based nanocatalysts of Mn−Fe/TiO2, Mn−Co/TiO2, and Mn−Ce/TiO2 were exhibited in Figure 1, and the bimetallic nanocatalysts, the NOx conversion increased significantly with the temperature rising catalytic ability of Mn/TiO2 catalyst was depicted as a contrast

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Summary

Introduction

Nitrogen oxides (NOx ) are regard as the main air pollutant contributing to acid rain, photochemical smog, greenhouse effects, and ozone depletion [1]. Selective catalytic reduction (SCR) of NOx by NH3 or urea is proposed to be the highly effective and completely developed method to eliminate NOx pollution [2]. V2 O5 -WO3 (MoO3 )/TiO2 is used for its excellent catalytic performance in the typical standard SCR reaction [3]: (1). The vanadium-based catalysts can not reach satisfactory efficiency of eliminating NOx when the reaction temperature is lower than 250 ◦ C. The fast selective catalytic reduction (fast SCR) attracted the attention of many research groups due to its lower reaction temperature and higher reaction efficiency [4]: NO + NO2 + 2NH3 → 2N2 + 3H2 O (2). The fast SCR still needs reaction temperature within 150–300 ◦ C to achieve high efficiency of NOx elimination [4,6]

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