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Insights into in situ surface reconstruction in cobalt perovskite oxides for enhanced catalytic activity

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS [2024]
Yanyu Jin, Hongjun Cheng, Qibao Wang, Xiaoqing Liu, Shengpeng Mo, Bin Zhou, Yue Peng, Yu Wang, Wenzhe Si, Junhua Li
ABSTRACT

An depth understanding of the fundamental interactions between surface termination and catalytic activity is crucial to prompt the properties of functional perovskite materials. The elastic energy due to size mismatch and electrostatic attraction of the charged Sr dopant by positively charged oxygen vacancies induced inert A-site surface enrichment rearrangement for perovskites. Lower temperatures could reduce A-site enrichment, but it is difficult to form perovskite crystals. La 0.8 Sr 0.2 CoO 3-δ (LSCO) as a model perovskite oxide was modified with additive urea to reduce the crystallization temperature , and suppress Sr segregation. The LSCO catalysts with 600 °C annealing temperature (LSCO-600) exhibited a 19.4-fold reaction reactivity of toluene oxidation than that with 800 °C annealing temperature (LSCO-800). Combined surface-sensitive and depth-resolved techniques for surface and sub-surface analysis, surface Sr enrichment was effectively suppressed due to decreased oxygen vacancy concentration and smaller electrostatic driving force. DFT calculations and in-situ DRIFTs spectra well revealed that tuning the surface composition/termination affected the intrinsic reactivity. The catalyst surface with lower Sr enrichment could easily adsorb toluene, cleave, and decompose benzene rings , thus contributing to toluene degradation to CO 2 . This work demonstrates a green and efficient way to control surface composition and termination at the atomic scale for higher catalytic activity.

MATERIALS

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