Disentangling Local Interfacial Confinement and Remote Spillover Effects in Oxide-Oxide Interactions.
Cui DongRentao MuRongtan LiJianyang WangTongyuan SongZhenping QuQiang FuXinhe BaoPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Supported oxides are widely used in many important catalytic reactions, in which the interaction between the oxide catalyst and oxide support is critical but still remains elusive. Here, we construct a chemically bonded oxide-oxide interface by chemical deposition of Co 3 O 4 onto ZnO powder (Co 3 O 4 /ZnO), in which complete reduction of Co 3 O 4 to Co 0 has been strongly impeded. It was revealed that the local interfacial confinement effect between Co oxide and the ZnO support helps to maintain a metastable CoO x state in CO 2 hydrogenation reaction, producing 93% CO. In contrast, a physically contacted oxide-oxide interface was formed by mechanically mixing Co 3 O 4 and ZnO powders (Co 3 O 4 -ZnO), in which reduction of Co 3 O 4 to Co 0 was significantly promoted, demonstrating a quick increase of CO 2 conversion to 45% and a high selectivity toward CH 4 (92%) in the CO 2 hydrogenation reaction. This interface effect is ascribed to unusual remote spillover of dissociated hydrogen species from ZnO nanoparticles to the neighboring Co oxide nanoparticles. This work clearly illustrates the equally important but opposite local and remote effects at the oxide-oxide interfaces. The distinct oxide-oxide interactions contribute to many diverse interface phenomena in oxide-oxide catalytic systems.