Abstract
AbstractDirect oxidation of methane to value‐added products under mild conditions remains a grand challenge due to the problem of selective CH4 activation. Here we report a Fe‐MOR‐F catalyst prepared via freeze‐drying method, indicating excellent catalytic performance for the direct partial oxidation of methane using H2O2 under mild conditions. Various characterizations including XRD, NH3‐TPD, H2‐TPR, UV‐Vis, XPS, and EPR studies revealed that Fe‐MOR‐F catalyst possesses more highly dispersed monomeric and dimeric iron species, which is strongly correlated to its high catalytic activity for direct methane oxidation. The DFT calculations indicate the highly dispersed monomeric and dimeric iron species can effectively homogenize H2O2 into active hydroxyl groups, while iron clusters can decompose H2O2 into inactive O2. The EPR experiments show more ⋅OH was generated on Fe‐MOR‐F catalyst, which is in line with DFT calculation results. These structural characteristics endow Fe‐MOR‐F catalyst with superior catalytic performance for direct methane oxidation in terms of oxygenates yield (9.8 mol kgcat−1 h−1) and selectivity (91.8 %) at 80 °C. This work not only highlights the excellent catalytic performance of methane activation on the highly dispersed monomeric and dimeric iron species, but also promotes the potential application by freeze‐drying method for the preparation of the highly dispersed active species.
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