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Host-induced alteration of the neighbors of single platinum atoms enables selective and stable hydrogenation of butadiene.

Yi WangMengru WangXiaoling MouShiyi WangXunzhu JiangZupeng ChenZheng JiangRonghe LinYunjie Ding
Published in: Nanoscale (2022)
Tuning the coordination neighbors of the metal center is emerging as an elegant approach to manipulating the performance of supported single-atom catalysts in heterogeneous catalysis. Herein, atomically dispersed Pt species with different coordination neighbors hosted on nitrogen-doped carbon (NC) and graphitic carbon nitride (C 3 N 4 ) are constructed through an impregnation-activation approach. Advanced characterization techniques including X-ray electron microscopy, X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and high angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy reveal the different nature of active sites induced by the hosts: i.e. , the Pt-N x configuration in NC but both Pt-N and Pt-O coordinations in C 3 N 4 . H 2 -D 2 exchange experiments and electron microscopy further evidence that Pt/NC exhibits a high propensity for H 2 splitting and high thermal stability of the Pt species against agglomeration, whereas Pt/C 3 N 4 cannot dissociate H 2 and the Pt atoms easily aggregate in the reductive stream. Consequently, when applied in the selective hydrogenation of 1,3-butadiene, Pt/NC exhibits higher selectivity to butenes and excellent stability, but Pt/C 3 N 4 behaves as a nanoparticle analogue favoring deep hydrogenation. The superior selectivity patterns of the single Pt atoms over Pt nanoparticles are rationalized by the inversed adsorption strength between the H 2 and 1,3-butadiene molecules at different metal sites, which is substantiated by the kinetic studies.
Keyphrases
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