Abstract

We report the effects of alloying Cu into silica supported Pd nanoparticles on the catalytic activity, surface composition, and particle structure during CO oxidation Pd is highly active for CO oxidation but is inhibited by relevant competitive reagents (e.g. NO) at low temperatures (< 150 °C). By alloying Cu into Pd nanoparticles, NO inhibition is suppressed without any CO oxidation activity loss. Infrared spectroscopy illustrates the formation of surface nitrosyl (NO-Pd) is eliminated in the PdCu alloy catalyst, preventing CO oxidation inhibition by NO. X-ray absorption spectroscopy studies show that Pd in the monometallic catalyst forms a surface oxide after light-off. Conversely, in the PdCu catalyst, Pd remains metallic during reaction, independent of temperature, whereas the Cu oxidizes when the catalyst becomes active, after light-off. Furthermore, DRIFTS studies show that the Cu segregates to the surface as the catalyst becomes active for diesel oxidation, presumably becoming the O2 adsorption site.

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