Abstract

Manganese oxides (MnO2)-based catalysts are prominent candidates for ozone elimination, which always bear the accumulation of the intermediate oxygen species and water, resulting in unsatisfactory catalytic efficiency. To overcome this critical defect, we propose carbon nanotubes confined MnO2 catalysts (MnO2-in-CNT) for efficient and stable ozone decomposition over a wide relative humidity range (RH, 15–90%). Strikingly, the catalyst exhibits an efficient and sustainable ozone conversion (98%) over 100 h under a gas hourly space velocity (GHSV) of 600,000 mL g−1 h−1 and RH of 15%, and durability under high RH (77% over 50 h, RH 70%), well beyond its unconfined analog and most reported works. This excellent catalytic performance can be attributed to the facilitated intermediate desorption on active sites and the confined structure alleviated the effect of water on inner MnO2. This discovery is expected to drive great progress in the applications of confined-structure catalysts for air purification.

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