O2 Activation on Ceria Catalysts-The Importance of Substrate Crystallographic Orientation.
Chengwu YangXiaojuan YuStefan HeißlerPeter G WeidlerAlexei NefedovYuemin WangChristof WöllThomas KroppJoachim PaierJoachim SauerPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2017)
An atomic-level understanding of dioxygen activation on metal oxides remains one of the major challenges in heterogeneous catalysis. By performing a thorough surface-science study of all three low-index single-crystal surfaces of ceria, probably the most important redox catalysts, we provide a direct spectroscopic characterization of reactive dioxygen species at defect sites on the reduced ceria (110) and (100) surfaces. Surprisingly, neither of these superoxo and peroxo species was found on ceria (111), the thermodynamically most stable surface of this oxide. Applying density functional theory, we could relate these apparently inconsistent findings to a sub-surface diffusion of O vacancies on (111) substrates, but not on the less-closely packed surfaces. These observations resolve a long standing debate concerning the location of O vacancies on ceria surfaces and the activation of O2 on ceria powders.