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Article
A Facile Method for in-situ Preparation of the MnO/LaMnO Catalyst for the Removal of Toluene 2
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Wenzhe Si, Yu Wang, Shen Zhao, Fang-yun Hu, and Junhua Li Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b06255 • Publication Date (Web): 17 Feb 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 29, 2016
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A Facile Method for in-situ Preparation of the
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MnO2/LaMnO3 Catalyst for the Removal of Toluene
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Wenzhe Si, a Yu Wang,a Shen Zhao, a Fangyun Hu, a and Junhua Li a,*
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a
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Environment, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, P. R. China
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ABSTRACT
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MOx/ABO3 is a promising catalyst for the high-efficiency removal of volatile organic
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compounds. However, this catalyst is limited on practical applications due to its complex
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synthesis procedure and high cost. In this work, the MnO2/LaMnO3 catalyst was prepared in-situ
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using a facile one-step method for the first time, in which partial La cations were selectively
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removed from three dimensionally chain-like ordered macroporous (3DOM) LaMnO3 material.
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After selective removal, the obtained MnO2/LaMnO3 sample expressed an excellent catalytic
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performance on toluene oxidation. Toluene could be completely oxidized into CO2 and H2O at
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290 °C over the MnO2/LaMnO3 catalyst with a toluene/oxygen molar ratio of 1/100 and a space
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velocity of 120,000 mL/(g h). In addition, the apparent activation energy value of
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MnO2/LaMnO3 was 57 kJ/mol, which was lower than those of other metal oxides catalysts.
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According to O2-TPD and XPS results, it is concluded that the high catalytic performance of
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MnO2/LaMnO3 was mainly associated with the large amount of oxygen species and the excellent
State Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control, School of
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lattice oxygen mobility. MnO2/LaMnO3 is a promising catalyst for the practical removal of
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volatile organic compounds due to its high efficiency, good stability, low cost, and convenient
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preparation.
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1. INTRODUCTION
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The emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) have become a notable problem during
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the high development of industry and transportation because they cause harm to both the
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environment and human health.1-3 Among the present technologies for the elimination of VOCs,
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catalytic oxidation is an effective option due to its high efficiency and low operating
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temperature.4-7 The research on the development of high-performance catalysts is the key point
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for catalytic oxidation. The noble-metal catalysts have already exhibited high catalytic activity in
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the previous studies.8,
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sintering and a poisoning tendency, prevent the noble metals from wide industrial applications.5,
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6, 10
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thermal stability and low cost in some practical applications.11, 12 Therefore, it is necessary and
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important to elucidate the properties of transition metals oxides and improve their catalytic
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activity.
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However, many problems, such as high cost, low thermal stability,
In contrast, transition metal oxides are considered as a promising candidate due to their high
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ABO3 perovskites, as one of the common transition metals oxides, have been extensively
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applied as catalysts for selective catalytic reduction of NOx from automotive exhausts, CO2
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reforming of CH4 and catalytic oxidation of VOCs.13-15 Nevertheless, the VOCs oxidation
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activity of perovskites is not satisfactory because it is limited by their particularly low surface
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area (< 10 m2/g).15, 16 One of the solutions is to disperse ABO3 onto a metal oxides support
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(MOx) with a large surface area and thermal stability.15, 17, 18 Such ABO3/MOx materials inherit
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both superior catalytic activity from ABO3 and high stability from MOx. Kustov et al. capsulated
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LaCoO3 (LCO) catalysts into the mesoporous ZrO2, and the LCO/ZrO2 catalyst showed better
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performance than the LCO without ZrO2 support.17 Parvulescu et al. prepared a LCO perovskite
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catalyst with Ce1-xZrxO2 supports to study its performances on benzene and toluene oxidation.15
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The LCO/Ce1-xZrxO2 showed better catalytic activity than the bulk LCO.
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Another solution is to load MOx (e.g., MgO, MnO2, and Co3O4) on ABO3.16,
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In the
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MOx/ABO3 structure, the ABO3 perovskites play roles not only as supports but also as an active
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compose. Weng et al. explored a route for the syntheses of MgO/LCO catalyst.16 MgO was
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highly dispersed and the catalyst exhibited good performance on toluene and methane
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oxidations. Dai and coworkers prepared three dimensionally structured LaMnO3 (LMO) and its
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supported MnOx catalyst, which showed better performance than bulk LMO on toluene and
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methanol removal.19 Above all, preparation of MOx/ABO3 (or ABO3/MOx) is obviously
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beneficial for the increase of catalytic activity regarding the removal of VOCs. However, the
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synthesis of ABO3 and MOx must be performed independently, which is visibly complicated and
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of high-cost. In addition, accurate regulation and control of the synthesis conditions are required
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to ensure the high dispersion of active species (ABO3 or MOx) on the supports (MOx or ABO3),
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increasing the difficulty of the synthesis technique and decreasing the qualified rate of products.
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Both of these issues restrict the practical applications for MOx/ABO3 (or ABO3/MOx) regarding
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the elimination VOCs. It is necessary to design a facile and low-cost method to prepare such
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high-performance MOx/ABO3 (or ABO3/MOx) catalysts.
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To tackle the aforementioned challenges, we illustrate a one-step approach to produce in-situ a
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MnO2/LMO catalyst by selectively removing partial La element from LMO using acid treatment
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(Scheme 1). During this process, MnO2 can be directly formed on the surface of the LMO,
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requiring no extra procedure. To increase the contacting surface areas of LMO with acid, a three
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dimensionally chain-like ordered macroporous (3DOM) LMO material was first prepared. After
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selective removal of partial La cations, the MnO2/LMO catalyst was obtained with a large
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surface area and good dispersion. Furthermore, the amount and mobility of surface oxygen
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species were significantly improved after the acid treatment, resulting in the production of the
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MnO2/LMO catalyst with excellent catalytic activity on toluene oxidation.
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2. EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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2.1 Chemicals and Materials
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The chemicals used for the preparation were all of A.R. grade. Potassium peroxydisulfate
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(K2S2O8) and methyl methacrylate were purchased from Aladdin (China, Shanghai).
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Lanthanum(Ⅲ) nitrate hydrate (La(NO3)3·6H2O), manganese( ) nitrate (Mn(NO3)2, 50 wt%
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aqueous solution) and nitric acid (HNO3) were obtained from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co.,
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Ltd. (China, Shanghai). All chemicals were used without further purification.
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2.2 Synthesis of monodisperse PMMA microspheres
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The hard templates (monodisperse PMMA microspheres) were first synthesized. 3.00 mmol
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K2S2O8 was mixed with 1500 mL deionized water in a three-necked flask, stirred at 400 rpm and
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heated at 70 ºC to obtain a transparent solution. Next, the resulting solution was degassed with
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continuous flowing N2. 115 mL of methyl methacrylate was added into the above-described
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solution when the temperature maintained at 70 ºC. The mixture was then stirred at 70 ºC for 1 h
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until a white suspension was obtained. After cooling down, the suspension was centrifuged for
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75 min. The resulting precipitate was washed with deionized water and then dried in a water bath
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at 80 ºC. The wet solid was continued to dry at room temperature (RT) for 48 h and then ground
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well.
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2.3 Preparation of bulk LMO, 3DOM-LMO and MnO2/LMO samples
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13 g of La(NO3)3·6H2O, 6.97 mL Mn(NO3)2 and 14 mL deionized water were mixed together
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by stirring for 1 h. Next, approximately 2.00 g of PMMA template was impregnated in the mixed
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solution. After the PMMA microspheres were thoroughly wetted, the excessive liquid was
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filtered, and then the solid was dried at RT for 24 h. Next, the resulting solid was calcined as
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follows: the first calcination step was performed under N2 flow. The precursor was heated at a
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rate of 1 °C/min up to 300 ºC and then kept at this temperature for 3 h. After cooling down to RT,
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the second calcination step was performed under air flow. The solid was heated up to 300 ºC and
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then held for 2 h; subsequently, the solid was heated up to 750 ºC and then held for 4 h. During
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the whole process, the heating rate was 1 ºC/min. The obtained material was denoted as 3DOM-
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LMO. Bulk LMO sample was prepared using a traditional sol-gel method.
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The MnO2/LMO sample was prepared by a selective removal method in which the 3DOM-
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LMO powder was immersed in 3M diluted HNO3 solution. After approximately 10 minutes, the
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solid was filtered and washed for 3 times, and then dried at 60 ºC overnight. The final product
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was denoted as MnO2/LMO. The detailed synthesis procedures are described in the Supporting
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Information.
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2.4 Characterization of the LMO, 3DOM-LMO and MnO2/LMO samples
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All of the samples were characterized using multiple techniques, which included: X-ray
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diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), elemental mapping, X-ray
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photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), hydrogen temperature-programmed reduction (H2-TPR) and
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oxygen temperature-programmed desorption (O2-TPD). The detailed characterization procedures
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are described in the Supporting Information.
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2.5 Catalytic evaluation
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The catalytic activities for the toluene oxidation were measured by a continuous flow fixed-
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bed quartz microreactor (i.d. = 6.0 mm) using 0.05 g sample (40–60 mesh). The gaseous toluene
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was produced by a nitrogen-blowing method, passing N2 flow through a bottle containing pure
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toluene chilled in an ice-water isothermal bath. The gas mixture contained 2000 ppm toluene,
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20% O2 and N2 (balance gas). The total flow rate was 100 mL/min, giving a GHSV of 120,000
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mL/(g h). The concentrations of toluene were monitored on line by a gas chromatograph (Agilent
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7890A) equipped with a flame ionization detector (FID, using the column of Porapack-
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Q/molecular sieve 5A, 2 m in length) and a thermal conductivity detector (TCD, using the
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column of RT-QPlot divinylbenzene PLOT, 30 m in length). The details are described in the
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Supporting Information.
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3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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3.1 Crystal structure
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Figure 1 shows the XRD results of the three samples. It is found that the XRD peaks of the
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bulk LMO and 3DOM-LMO samples in the 2θ range of 20–80o could be well indexed as the
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XRD pattern of the standard LMO sample (JCPDS No. 50-0299).20, 21Both of the LMO samples
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were single-phase, and the crystal structures showed a rhombohedral phase. Generally, the
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crystal phase (orthorhombic, rhombohedral, or monoclinic) of LMO is strongly dependent on the
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synthesis method. By adopting various preparation approaches with or without a template,
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rhombohedral and hexagonal LMO could be generated. After the acid treatment, the crystallinity
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of the diffraction peaks was weakened, and a new peak (located at 36.7o) assigned to MnO2
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appeared. This suggests that the dilute HNO3 can selectively dissolute partial La cations in LMO
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perovskites, and the remaining part tended to form MnO2 crystals. According to the position of
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the new peak (36.7o) and the previous research,19 it can be assumed that the crystal phase of the
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newly created MnO2 is gamma phase (JCPDS No. 14-0644). The peak at 36.7o was the main
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peak of gamma-MnO2.22, 23 SEM mapping revealed that the La elements were gradually removed
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from surface to bulk (Supporting Information, Figure S4). This suggests that the acid attack
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mainly occurred on the surface of 3DOM-LMO. Although the Mn elements were slightly lost,
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most of the Mn elements remained after the acid attack. The reaction of acid attack occurred
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selectively, and the La elements were easier to remove. As the acid treatment is uniform, the
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newly created MnO2 was highly dispersed on the LMO surface. We could not find any
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agglomeration of MnO2 from the SEM mapping results.
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3.2 Morphology, surface area and pore structure
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Figure 2 illustrates the morphological changes of the samples. It can be observed that the LMO
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sample exhibited an irregular compact surface, leading to low surface area and small amount of
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active sites. The SEM images of 3DOM-LMO catalyst were given in Figures 2(b) and 2(c),
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which showed a high-quality chain-like ordered macroporous morphology. The average pore size
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was approximately 47 nm, and the average wall thickness was approximately 22 nm. Figure 2(d)
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revealed the destruction of the 3DOM structure after the acid treatment. The original smooth
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surface of the macropores became rumpled and the well-ordered structure became disordered,
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and many nanopores appeared, which resulted from the increase of the surface area of
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MnO2/LMO. The surface area and pore structure results (Table 1) from the N2 adsorption–
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desorption isotherms and pore-size distributions of these samples (Supporting Information,
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Figure S1) were consistent with the information from the SEM images. The surface area was
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increased more than 6 times after the acid treatment, from 22.3 m2/g (3DOM-LMO) to 144.7
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m2/g (MnO2/LMO). It is suggested that the shrinkage in the volume of the treated material could
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be responsible for the morphological and surface area changes after the acid treatment. After
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calculation, there is theoretically 23.9 % shrinkage in volume from LMO to γ-MnO2.22 Because a
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number of γ-MnO2 was formed on the surface of the 3DOM-LMO after the acid treatment,
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several gaps emerged with it as a result of the shrinkage occurring in the MnO2/LMO sample,
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thereby significantly increasing the surface area. Normally, a porous structure and high surface
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area are beneficial for the improvement on the catalytic performance by facilitating the
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accessibility of the reactant molecules to the catalysts.23
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3.3 Reducibility
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The H2-TPR experiment was performed to determine the reducibility of the catalysts. The H2-
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TPR profiles of the three samples are exhibited in Figure 3, and their quantitative analysis results
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are listed in Table 1.The reduction reaction occurred over the chain-like LMO sample with the
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following characteristics: the reduction peak at 399 ºC is attributed to the reduction of Mn4+ to
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Mn3+, as well as the removal of over-stoichiometric oxygen, the peak at 485 ºC is assigned to the
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single-electron reduction of Mn3+ located in a coordination-unsaturated microenvironment, and
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the reduction peak above 833 ºC was due to the reduction of the left Mn3+ to Mn2+.20, 21 The
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temperatures of the two reduction peaks (407 and 852 ºC) of the bulk LMO sample were much
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higher than those (399 and 833 ºC) of the porous counterpart, indicating that the formation of the
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chain-like 3DOM structure could facilitate the reduction of LMO. After the acid treatment, all of
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the reduction peaks shifted to lower temperatures. The sharp reduction peaks at 292 and 388 ºC
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of MnO2/LMO sample were ascribed to the reduction of MnO2 for Mn4+ to Mn3+ and Mn3+ to
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Mn2+, respectively.19 The reduction peak at 773 ºC is assigned to the reduction of LMO, which
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appeared much earlier than those of bulk LMO and 3DOM-LMO sample. It is demonstrated
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from the change of the reduction peaks that the MnO2 species did exist and the MnO2/LMO
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structure was formed after the acid treatment, which was in accord with the XRD results.
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Moreover, the positions of the reduction peaks for MnO2/LMO sample (292 and 773ºC) were
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lower than those for the other two LMO catalysts, proving that the MnO2/LMO sample
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possessed the best low-temperature reducibility among the three samples. To further compare the
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low-temperature reducibility, we calculated the total H2 consumptions of the three samples. For
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LMO perovskites, the theoretical H2 consumption for the reduction of Mn3+ to Mn2+ is 2.06
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mmol/g if all the Mn species in LMO perovskites are Mn3+. For the 3DOM-LMO sample, the
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total H2 consumption of the three main peaks at 399, 485 and 833ºC was approximately 2.04
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mmol/g, which was larger than that of the bulk LMO sample (1.92 mmol/g). By means of the
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acid treatment, the total H2 consumption of three main peaks at 292, 388 and 773ºC for
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MnO2/LMO sample was 8.79 mmol/g. This value is observably larger than those for the other
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two catalysts, which indicated that parts of La elements were selectively removed after the acid
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treatment. The MnO2/LMO sample possessed the highest amount of total H2 consumption among
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the three catalysts. The excellent low-temperature reducibility of the MnO2/LMO sample was
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confirmed by the early reduction peak position, and the large amount of the total H2 consumption
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may result in the improvement on the catalytic performance over the toluene oxidation.
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3.4 Surface composition, metal oxidation state and oxygen species
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The information related to surface element compositions, metal oxidation states, and adsorbed
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species of a solid material can be detected accurately by XPS tests. Figure 4 shows the Mn 2p3/2
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and O 1s XPS spectra of the three samples. It can be found that there was the co-presence of
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surface Mn4+ and Mn3+ species, as well as surface lattice oxygen (Olatt), adsorbed oxygen (Oads,
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e.g., O2−, O22−, or O−), and surface carbonates (CO32−) on the surfaces of these three samples.24, 25
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The surface Mn4+/Mn3+ and Olatt/Oads atomic ratios can markedly influence the VOCs catalytic
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oxidation performance of manganite. According to the quantitative analyses on the XPS spectra,
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the surface element compositions and surface Mn4+/Mn3+ and Olatt/Oads atomic ratios could be
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estimated over these manganite samples, as summarized in Table 1. It could be found that the
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surface La/Mn atomic ratios for bulk LMO (1.38) and 3DOM-LMO (1.21) were obviously
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higher than the theoretical value (1.00). This result suggested that the native surface of LMO
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perovskites was preferentially occupied by La cations, which was in accord with our previous
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research.22 After selective removal of La cations, the surface La/Mn atomic ratio for MnO2/LMO
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sample decreased to 0.21, proving that the La element was indeed partly removed. In addition,
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the La/Mn atomic ratio in the whole MnO2/LMO was 0.44 (Supporting Information, Table S1),
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higher than the surface value, thus proving that the removal of La elements with the acid attack
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mainly occurred on the surface of the sample. The differences in the surface La/Mn atomic ratios
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may result indifferent performances between LMO perovskites and the MnO2/LMO sample on
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catalytic activity because the toluene catalytic reaction at low temperatures usually occurred on
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the surface transition metal ion-sites (such as Mn cations).27 From Figure 4(a), it can be observed
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that the asymmetrical Mn 2p3/2 XPS spectrum of each sample could be decomposed to three
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components at BE = 641.3, 642.8, and 644.7 eV, assignable to the surface Mn3+ and Mn4+
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species and the satellite of the Mn3+ species, respectively.20-23 The surface Mn4+/Mn3+ molar ratio
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increased from 0.39 (bulk LMO) to 1.35 (MnO2/LMO). This result may be caused by the
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appearance of MnO2 species. For LMO perovskites, the main valence state of Mn cations is +3.
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After the acid treatment, some MnO2 species appeared in the LMO perovskite, especially on the
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surface of the sample. The main valence state of Mn cations in MnO2 is +4, which resulted in the
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increase of the surface Mn4+/Mn3+ molar ratio in MnO2/LMO. This may be beneficial for the
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enhancement on toluene oxidation. For each sample, the O 1s spectrum (Figure 4(b)) could be
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decomposed into three components at BE = 529.1, 530.6, and 531.8 eV, attributed to the Olatt,
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Oads and carbonate species, respectively.22,
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smaller than that of the bulk LMO sample (2.50). After the acid treatment, the surface Olatt/Oads
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ratio of MnO2/LMO sample increased to 2.78, which was larger than the other two samples. The
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rise in surface active oxygen species concentration, especially in Olatt concentration, gives rise to
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enhanced catalytic performance of MnO2/LMO sample for the total oxidation of toluene.
The Olatt/Oads ratio of 3DOM-LMO (1.41) was
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The O2-TPD tests were performed to further investigate the differences of oxygen species for
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the three samples (Figure 5). Generally, the oxygen desorption peaks that appeared at low
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temperature (400 °C) are assigned to the release of Oads and
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Olatt, respectively.19 For bulk LMO and 3DOM-LMO samples, the peaks at low temperature were
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very weak, illustrating that the LMO perovskites possessed a small amount of Oads. The intensity
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of Olatt peaks for 3DOM-LMO was stronger than that for bulk LMO. It is indicated that the
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3DOM-LMO could release more Olatt than the bulk LMO during the toluene oxidation process.
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Among the three samples, the O2 desorption for MnO2/LMO catalyst started at the lowest
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temperature (372 °C), suggesting that the active oxygen species in MnO2/LMO could be released
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more readily.23 It was also found that the areas of the Olatt desorption peaks for the other two
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samples were obviously smaller than that for the MnO2/LMO sample, which suggested that the
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MnO2/LMO owned the largest amount of active oxygen species. It is well known that the
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oxidation of VOCs over transition metal oxide catalysts occur via the Mars–van Krevelen type
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redox cycle, and the nucleophilic attack of the Olatt lead to the occurrence of this reaction.26 Thus,
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the Olatt species play a vital role in the VOCs catalytic oxidation. The large amount of Olatt and
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the low Olatt desorption temperature may improve the toluene catalytic activity for MnO2/LMO
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sample.
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3.5 Catalytic performance
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When no catalysts were added into the toluene catalytic reaction, no significant conversion of
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toluene could be observed below 400 °C, indicating that no homogeneous reactions occurred
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under the adopted reaction conditions. The evaluation of the catalytic activities on the oxidation
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of toluene is shown in Figure 6(a). The toluene oxidation activity increased with an increase in
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reaction temperature, and the porous 3DOM-LMO catalyst performed better than the bulk
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counterpart. After the acid treatment, the MnO2/LMO showed the best performance among the
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three samples. Notably, toluene was completely oxidized to CO2 and H2O over the three
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manganese oxides catalysts, and no partial oxidation products were detected, as substantiated by
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the good carbon balance (ca. 99.5%) in each run. T50 and T90 (the reaction temperature
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corresponding to the toluene conversion of 50% and 90%, respectively) were used to compare
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the catalytic activities of the samples. For the bulk LMO, 3DOM-LMO and MnO2/LMO
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samples, the values of T50 are 336, 323, and 263 °C, respectively, and T90 are 381, 357 and 279
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°C, respectively (Table 1). Therefore, it can be deduced that the activities of the three samples
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enhanced in the order of bulk LMO < 3DOM-LMO < MnO2/LMO. The oxidation of toluene at
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low temperatures usually occurs on the surface transition metal ion-sites (such as Mn
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cations).27The native surface of LMO perovskites was preferentially occupied by La cations, as
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proved by the XPS results. After the acid treatment, the MnO2/LMO structure was formed, and
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the surface of the sample was occupied by Mn cations, which resulted in the better reactive
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performances on the MnO2/LMO sample than those on the other two LMO samples. As is known,
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the surface oxygen species, low-temperature reducibility and surface area are the mainly factors
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influencing the catalytic performance of the manganite materials.19,
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catalytic activity and characterization results presented in this work, it can be found that there
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was an obvious correlation of surface area, surface oxygen species, and low-temperature
26, 28
By comparing the
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reducibility with the toluene oxidation activity. Therefore, the good catalytic performance of
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MnO2/LMO for toluene oxidation could be resulted from its higher surface area, higher surface
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oxygen species concentration, and better low-temperature reducibility, as well as the special
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MnO2/LMO structure. The MnO2/LMO with large surface area and many nanopores could not
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only facilitate the toluene access into the inside of catalyst but also increase the contact area of
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the sample with toluene, thereby accelerating the reaction of toluene oxidation.
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It is not sufficient to evaluate the catalytic activity of the samples just by the comparison of the
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T50 and T90. It is well accepted that the surface areas can significantly influence the catalytic
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activities. As the surface areas of the three samples varied substantially, the apparent activation
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energy (Ea) was introduced to exclude the effect of the surface area. The catalyst with lower Ea
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value can cause the toluene to be oxidized more readily.23 The Ea values were calculated using
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the Arrhenius plots in Figure 6(b), and the Ea value of MnO2/LMO was found to be the lowest
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among the three samples. The differences in Ea are most likely generated by the surface oxygen
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species. The MnO2/LMO sample possessed the largest amount of Olatt and made the Olatt release
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more easily, thereby enhancing the Olatt mobility on the catalyst, bringing an improvement on the
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toluene oxidation. As a result, the Ea value of MnO2/LMO was the lowest among these samples.
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Note that, under similar reaction conditions, the Ea value (57 kJ/mol) over our MnO2/LMO
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catalyst was much lower than those (Ea value = 126 kJ/mol) over 30 wt% MnOx/Al2O3,29 (Ea
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value = 124 kJ/mol) over Ni0.5Zn0.5Fe2O4,30 (Ea value = 94 kJ/mol) over 15 wt% CuO/Al2O3,29
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and (Ea value = 58 kJ/mol) over LaMnO3-PL-1,21 but higher than those (Ea value = 56 kJ/mol)
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over 20 wt% LaCoO3/CeO2 and (Ea value = 48 kJ/mol) over 4.9 Au/LaMnO3.31, 32
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Furthermore, the influence of different GHSV values on the toluene conversion were also
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investigated (Figure 6(c)). In the case of MnO2/LMO sample, the T50 and T90 values were 263
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and 279 °C at GHSV =120,000 mL/(g h), respectively. These T50 and T90 values were 13 and 10
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°C lower, respectively, than those achieved at GHSV= 240,000 mL/(g h). With the GHSV value
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decreased from 120,000 to 60,000 mL/(g h), the activity increased. That is, the catalytic
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performance on toluene oxidation is highly influenced by the GHSV values. The toluene
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oxidation was improved with the decrease of the GHSV values. Next, we calculated the Ea
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values over the MnO2/LMO sample on different GHSV values, as shown in Figure S5. It could
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be found that the Ea values on different GHSV were similar. This result means that the SV did
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not influence the Ea values. Above all, the catalytic activity on toluene oxidation for manganese
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oxides catalysts is primarily decided by surface oxygen species, low-temperature reducibility,
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surface area and SV values. However, for the Ea values, the surface area and GHSV values do
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not play a decisive role. As the oxidation of toluene over catalysts manganese oxides catalysts
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occur on the basis of the Mars–van Krevelen type redox cycle, the Olatt play the key role on the
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Ea value.
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To test the catalytic stability of the MnO2/LMO sample, an uninterrupted reaction experiment
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was performed (Figure 6(d)). Two runs of catalytic tests (heating up and cooling down) were
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first performed, and then 12 h of on-stream reaction at the reaction temperature of 275 °C and
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GHSV of 120,000 mL/(g h); finally, two runs of catalytic tests (heating up and cooling down)
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were performed. The running time of the whole progress was 36 h, and the result of this
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continuous test illustrated that the activity of MnO2/LMO depressed little within 36 h of reaction.
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The good stability provides the possibility for the practical elimination of toluene.
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ASSOCIATED CONTENT
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Supporting Information. Preparation and characterization method and additional results are shown.
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“This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.”
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
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Corresponding Author
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*Tel.: +86 10 62771093; Fax.: +86 10 62771093. E-mail:
[email protected].
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Notes
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The authors declare no competing financial interest.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENT
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This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (21325731,
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51478241, and 21221004), the National High-Tech Research and Development (863) Program of
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China (2013AA065304) and China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2015M581115).
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Table 1 Surface element compositions, BET surface areas, H2 consumption, toluene oxidation
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activity and apparent activation energies (Ea) of the three samples.
XPS SBET Mn4+/Mn3+
Olatt/Oads
molar ratio
molar ratio
molar ratio
bulk LMO
1.38
0.39
2.50
2.9
3DOMLMO
1.21
0.50
1.41
MnO2/ LMO
0.21
1.35
2.78
La/Mn
H2 consumption
toluene oxidation activity and apparent activation energy T50
T90
Ea
(°C)
(°C)
(kJ/mol)
1.92
336
381
71
22.3
2.04
323
357
66
144.7
8.79
263
279
57
(m2/g)
(mmol/g)
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Scheme 1. Synthesis route of the MnO2/LMO sample.
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Figure 1. XRD patterns of the three samples. From bottom to top: bulk LMO (JCPDS No. 50-
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0299), 3DOM-LMO (JCPDS No. 50-0299), and MnO2/LMO.
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.
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Figure 2. SEM images of the three samples. (a) bulk LMO, (b-c) 3DOM-LMO and (d)
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MnO2/LMO.
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Figure 3. H2-TPR profiles of the three samples.
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Figure 4. (a) Mn 2p3/2 and (b) O 1s XPS spectra of the three samples.
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Figure 5. O2-TPD profiles of the three samples.
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Figure 6. (a) Activity profiles and (b) Arrhenius plots of the three samples, (c) effect of GHSV
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on the catalytic activity over MnO2/LMO sample, (d) catalytic stability of MnO2/LMO at GHSV
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= 120,000 ml/(g h).
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