Mechanism driven design of trimer Ni 1 Sb 2 site delivering superior hydrogenation selectivity to ethylene.
Xiaohu GeMingying DouYueqiang CaoXi LiuQiang YuwenJing ZhangGang QianXue-Qing GongXinggui ZhouLiwei ChenWeikang YuanXuezhi DuanPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Mechanism driven catalyst design with atomically uniform ensemble sites is an important yet challenging issue in heterogeneous catalysis associated with breaking the activity-selectivity trade-off. Herein, a trimer Ni 1 Sb 2 site in NiSb intermetallic featuring superior selectivity is elaborated for acetylene semi-hydrogenation via a theoretical guidance with a precise synthesis strategy. The trimer Ni 1 Sb 2 site in NiSb intermetallic is predicted to endow acetylene reactant with an adequately but not excessively strong σ-adsorption mode while ethylene product with a weak π-adsorption one, where such compromise delivers higher ethylene formation rate. An in-situ trapping of molten Sb by Ni strategy is developed to realize the construction of Ni 1 Sb 2 site in the intermetallic P6 3 /mmc NiSb catalysts. Such catalyst exhibits ethylene selectivity up to 93.2% at 100% of acetylene conversion, significantly prevailing over the referred Ni catalyst. These insights shed new lights on rational catalyst design by taming active sites to energetically match targeted reaction pathway.