Abstract
Multi-structured Ag/MnO2-cordierite molded catalysts were prepared by hydrothermal method and applied to the catalytic oxidation of VOCs. Catalytic activities of Ag/MnO2-cordierite were evaluated by 1000 ppm of toluene, ethyl acetate and chlorobenzene degradation respectively at the air atmosphere, and their physicochemical properties were characterized through multiple techniques containing XRD, SEM, TEM, H2-TPR and XPS. It is found that nanorod Ag/MnO2-cordierite molded catalyst showed prominent catalytic activity for VOCs decomposition and the T90 for toluene, ethyl acetate and chlorobenzene are 275 °C, 217 °C and 385 °C respectively under the space velocity of 10,000 h−1. High valence manganese oxide, more active lattice oxygen proportion and superior low-temperature reducibility were the great contributors to the high activity of the catalyst with nanorod morphology. Studies of space velocity and catalytic stability over nanorod Ag/MnO2-cordierite molded catalyst have confirmed the good catalytic performance, excellent mechanical strength and satisfied anti-toxicity to Cl at higher space velocity, which indicates that this molded catalyst have promise for industrial application.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are classified as an indispensable cause for the current atmospheric pollution1,2. Due to the high chemical stability, toxicity and carcinogenic effect, VOCs pose serious threats to human health and ecological environment3,4. However, the growing emissions of VOCs owing to rapid urbanization and industrialization make it urgent to control and removal VOCs effectively5. Among the numerous approaches, catalytic oxidation is widely recognized as an effective and broad technique to degrade the industrial VOCs due to its low energy consumption, high purification efficiency, heat recovery and so on6,7. Therefore, the study of low-temperature, high-activity and anti-poisoning catalysts is a key to the catalytic oxidation in industrial process.
Many catalysts can be used for catalytic oxidation of VOCs8,9,10,11,12. Recent studies showed supported transition metal oxides catalysts such as VOx, MnOx and WOx have been applied widely and efficiently8,9,10. Specially, manganese dioxides have attracted extensive attentions because of its high selectivity and activity at low temperature11,12,13. However, some drawbacks such as poor stability, sintering and low conversion rate prevent more general applications. Articles reported presently that the incorporation of noble metals, such as Pt, Au and Ag, can promote the oxidation of VOCs and enhance the anti-toxicity of the catalyst effectively because of their higher activity for the break of C-C bond, C-H bond and C-Cl bond14,15,16,17. For example, the Au/Mn2O3 powdered catalyst prepared by Xie et al.15 achieved 90% conversion of toluene at the conditions of volume ratio of toluene to O2 of 1:400, 258 °C and space velocity of 40,000 ml/(g·h). Xia et al.18 prepared the nanotube Au-Pd/α-MnO2 powdered catalyst and observed the good catalytic activity for VOCs oxidation with 40–60 mesh quartz sand in a quartz tube with an inner diameter of 4 mm. The studies reported7,12,18,19,20 so far are mostly carried out by mixing the pure powdered catalyst into the millimeter-scale quartz tube reactor through incorporating inert material such as quartz sand. However, they are unsuitable for actual catalytic combustion owing to incomplete reaction between catalyst and reactants under high volume space velocity, and most of them were applied to degrade one kind of VOCs in the atmosphere with high oxygen content. There are few researches about lower temperature catalytic degradation of various VOCs and chlorinated volatile organic compound (Cl-VOCs) in actual industrial exhaust gas treatment. Moreover, catalysts which can completely destroy Cl-VOCs are restricted by high temperatures and serious deactivation in the presence of Cl21,22,23. Studies24 have shown that the molded catalyst can offer lower mass transfer resistance and higher diffusion efficiency, which can be a promoter for excellent catalytic activity for VOCs degradation. Cordierite25,26 has been widely used as carrier because of its superior mechanical stability and hydrothermal stability as well as its plasticity. For example, Mn-Co-Ce/cordierite catalyst27 and Cr-MnO2/cordierite catalyst28 increased the external mass transfer rate to optimize the catalytic combustion performance of Cl-VOCs. In previous work20, Ag/MnO2 powdered catalyst was prepared to degrade toluene. It has observed that excellent catalytic oxidation performance due to the multiple valence state of Mn and the better oxygen transformation between transition metal oxides in the redox reaction by Ag. Therefore, Ag/MnO2 may be a promising catalytic oxidation of VOCs. However, there are few studies of cordierite coated by Ag/MnO2 molded catalyst.
In this work, the Ag/MnO2 catalysts with different morphology supported on cordierite were synthesized through a liquid phase reduction method and then were used for catalytic degradation of toluene, ethyl acetate and chlorobenzene. Additionally, combined with the activity and physical property characterization results of the catalyst, the structure-activity relationship of the catalyst and the cause of the chlorine poisoning of the catalyst were investigated.
Methods
Catalysts preparation
The nanorod MnO2 and nanotube MnO2 were synthesized by hydrothermal method published in previous papers12,20, and the preparation details of the MnO2 precursors were described in SI-1. The Ag/MnO2 catalyst was synthesized by a liquid phase reduction method. Typically, quantitative MnO2 powder was firstly dispersed in 0.01 mol/l AgNO3 (in accordance with the silver loading of 2 wt%) and stirred for 2 h at room temperature to obtain a homogenous suspension. The desired volume NaBH4 aqueous solution (theoretical molar ratio of NaBH4: Ag+ = 2:1) was added to the suspension, followed by stirring until the reaction was finished. Next, the products were filtered, washed by deionized water and then dried at 80 °C. According to their results of morphology, the names of samples were donated as the R-Ag/MnO2 (nanorod Ag/MnO2) and T-Ag/MnO2 (nanotube Ag/MnO2). Finally, the Ag/MnO2 catalysts supported on cordierite (the diameter of 2 cm and height of 1 cm, 200 mesh) were manufactured using a wet impregnation method with aluminum sol as a binder. The samples were subsequently dried in an oven of 100 °C for 1 h and then calcined in a muffle furnace at 300 °C for 3 h.
Catalytic activity tests
Catalytic activity was implemented by a self-assembled tubular fixed bed reactor within the temperature range 80–450 °C (Fig. 1). The flow rates of each gas path were calculated based on the saturated vapor pressure of VOCs and controlled by the mass flow meters. The bubbling gas stream passed through the liquid organic matter and then merged with the equilibrium gas to obtain the desired concentration of VOCs gas, which then entered the tube furnace and reacted with the catalysts in the middle of the quartz tube. The concentration of VOCs before and after the reaction at different temperatures was obtained using the on-line gas chromatograph (GC-9790) outfitted with a flame ionization detector (FID) and a capillary column (ONLYSCI, China) of 50 m * 0.32 mm * 0.5 μm. By the way, the products of three VOCs have been identified as CO2 and H2O by clarify lime water and anhydrous copper sulfate, where HCl appeared in the oxidation products of chlorobenzene by detection of a silver nitrate solution. Meanwhile, the blank test was performed without catalysts to ensure the accuracy and reliability of experiments.
The VOCs conversion was calculated according to the following equation, where CIn and COut represented the concentration of VOCs in the gas before and after the reaction, respectively.
Characterization of catalysts
The elemental compositions of the catalysts were measured using an Agilent 7500cx inductively coupled plasma spectrometry (ICP). The morphology of the catalysts was obtained by scanning electron microscopy (SEM, model numbers was JEOL, JSM-7800F) operating at 10 kV after precoating the samples with gold (ion sputtering apparatus, JFC1600) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM, model numbers was FEI Tecnai G2 F20) at an accelerating voltage of 200Kv. X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns were performed by a Rigaku Utima IV X-ray diffract meter, which was equipped with Cu Kα radiation. The XRD data were collected at the range of 10 to 80° with 5°/min scan rate. The reducibility of the catalysts was measured by a Quantachrom automatic chemisorption analyzer to obtain the hydrogen temperature programmed reduction curve (H2-TPR). 0.05 g catalyst was placed in a mixed gas stream of 10 vol.% H2/Ar and then heated to 800 °C at the programmed temperature rate of 10 °C/min. The X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) of the samples was measured using an X-ray photoelectron spectrometer equipped with an Al Kα excitation source, whose model number was Thermo ESCALAB 250Xi.
Results and Discussion
Catalytic oxidation of toluene, ethyl acetate and chlorobenzene
Catalytic activity
The results of the degradation evaluation in three VOCs oxidation including toluene, ethyl acetate and chlorobenzene are shown in Fig. 2(a–c). From these, it is easy to see that the conversion of VOCs rose with the increase of the reaction temperature, and R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite showed better catalytic activity than T-Ag/MnO2-cordierite. T90 (Temperature corresponding to the VOCs conversion of 90%) is commonly used to evaluate and compare the catalytic activity of samples. With regard to the R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite, the values of T90 for ethyl acetate, toluene and chlorobenzene conversion were 217 °C, 275 °C and 385 °C, which were lower than those of T-Ag/MnO2-cordierite (260 °C, 330 °C and 420 °C), indicating that the R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite has better catalytic activity than T-Ag/MnO2-cordierite. It is worth pointing out that, with the same conversion rate, the degradation temperature required for toluene and chlorobenzene displays higher than ethyl acetate. The reason may be related to the different strength between reactants and catalyst surface. It has been found that aromatic hydrocarbon compounds composed of one saturated chain and one benzene ring have a strong interaction with the surface of catalysts, making them easier to compete with oxygen for adsorption and occupy more active sites during the reaction29. What’s more, comparing with other powder catalysts (MnOx/γ-Al2O321, Pt/TiO217 and nano-octahedra Ru/CeO230), R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite molded catalyst prepared in this study requires much lower temperature for catalytic degradation of Cl-VOCs.
Catalysts stability
R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite with high catalytic activity was selected to investigate the stability of the catalysts, shown in Fig. 3. It is easy to see that the conversion of ethyl acetate and toluene remained stable for 24 h (above 95%). For the conversion of chlorobenzene, it remained 90% within first 12 h and dropped slightly for the next 12 h, which still is located at above 85% within 24 hours. This result indicates that R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite has great stability to VOCs and exhibits certain anti-toxicity performance to chlorobenzene. The physical properties of R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite reacted with chlorobenzene for 24 h (denoted as RCB-Ag/MnO2) was carried out in section 3.2.
Effect of space velocity
In industrial applications, space velocity has been reported to be a critical factor affecting catalytic oxidation and devices economy. Effect of space velocity on catalytic activity of R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite has been studied, which is shown in the Fig. 4. Obviously, the degradation effect of R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite is reduced slightly with the increasing of space velocity from 10,000 h−1 to 40,000 h−1, where the catalyst ignition temperature and T90 of ethyl acetate have risen by approximately 100 °C and 70 °C respectively at a higher SV of 40,000 h−1 (still lower than 300 °C, Table 1). This result indicates that the catalyst have promise for adoption by the industry due to its high activity at high space velocity.
Physical properties of the catalysts
The elemental composition of the catalysts was measured by ICP-MS, and the results are shown in Table 2. The contents of Mn and Ag in the catalyst were about 42.6 wt% and 1.9 wt%, respectively. The Ag content coincides with the theoretical ratio of 2 wt% after deducting the aluminum sol component, which means that the noble metal Ag has been loaded into MnO2 successfully.
Figure 5 is the XRD patterns of the three catalysts. The presence of aluminum sol on the oxide supports had no effect on crystal formation of the catalysts (shown in SI-2). It is found that all samples in the 2θ range of 10–80° exhibit characteristic diffraction peaks of α-MnO2 (ICSD PDF 44–0141) and Ag (111) crystal plane at 38.1° (PDF#65-2871)15. An additional diffraction peak of T-Ag/MnO2 is observed at 32.5° assigning to Mn2O3 comparing with R-Ag/MnO2, which was probably due to the addition of HCl during preparation. Furthermore, the diffraction peaks of Mn2O3 and Mn3O4 (32.5° and 33.0°14) appeared and the peak intensity of α-MnO2 significantly weakened in the pattern of RCB-Ag/MnO2. This result was related with the structural transformation of α-MnO2 to Mn2O3 and Mn3O4, which may take place in the process of catalytic degradation of chlorobenzene. Related studies12 have shown that manganese oxides exhibit different activity in some benzenes catalytic oxidation reaction. Higher oxidation state of Mn species, namely MnO2, is preferable for oxidation reactions over Mn2O3 and Mn3O4. Combined with results of 3.1.1, it is reasonable to suggest that the catalytic activity of R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite with pure α-MnO2 is superior to that of T-Ag/MnO2-cordierite with mixed α-MnO2 and Mn2O3. Moreover, it was assumed that the formation of lower manganese oxides was responsible of a decrease in activity of R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite after chlorobenzene catalytic oxidation.
The SEM images of each sample are shown in the Fig. 6. Nanotube and nanorod morphology were observed in Fig. 6(b,d), and no clear differences in size or shape was detected in Fig. 6(a,b) or Fig. 6(c,d), indicating that the existence of aluminum sol has no influence in Ag/MnO2 catalyst morphology. It was also found that there was little change between R-Ag/MnO2 (Fig. 6(d)) and RCB-Ag/MnO2 (Fig. 6(f)), except that the nanorod length of RCB-Ag/MnO2was shorter.
Figure 7 reveals TEM images of Ag/MnO2 samples and SEM element mapping images of the R-Ag/MnO2. The Ag loaded on the catalyst with good dispersion (about 5 nm) and the Ag/MnO2 catalysts retained fine crystalline structure. The lattice spacing of the (110) and (111) crystal plane was 0.310 nm and 0.235 nm, respectively, which is in line with the corresponding values (0.310 nm) of standard α-MnO2 sample (JCPDS PDF 72–1982) and (0.236 nm) of standard Ag sample (JCPDS PDF 04–0783). It has been observed that rod-like Ag/MnO2 catalyst exhibits the higher VOCs conversion, whereas T-Ag/MnO2 shows relatively low catalytic activity. This difference in catalytic activity is attributed to the catalyst morphology. To our knowledge, catalysts with different morphology can expose different active or specific energy crystal faces selectively and some of them with special morphology might promote the better dispersion of active components. That can be contributed greatly to improve catalytic reactivity, selectivity and stability12. For this study, the R-Ag/MnO2 could be more favorable to increase the effective activated spot and improve the catalytic activity better than T-Ag/MnO2. As reported, the degradation of chlorobenzene calls for higher requirements for the stability of catalysts23. The morphology of R-Ag/MnO2 and the crystallinity of α-MnO2 are no variation after degrading Cl-VOCs at high space velocity, indicating that R-Ag/MnO2 catalyst has excellent mechanical strength and stability in this study.
H2-TPR curves of Ag/MnO2 catalysts are shown in Fig. 8. A large broad and strong peak at about 226 °C of the R-Ag/MnO2 pattern could be considered as the transformation from high-valent manganese ions to lower valence state. For T-Ag/MnO2 catalyst, the reduction peak and a shoulder peak shifted to the higher temperatures at 355 °C and 377 °C compared to R-Ag/MnO2. This indicates that R-Ag/MnO2 possesses better low temperature reduction performance than T-Ag/MnO2. After catalytic oxidation of chlorobenzene, the main reduction peaks of Mn species for RCB-Ag/MnO2 are shifted to higher temperature and could be regarded as two peaks at about 263 °C and 308 °C, which means the reduced reducibility may be one reason of the slight decrease in catalytic activity (combined with results of 3.1.2). In the light of previous results12,31, the transformation process of MnO2 can be reasonably interpreted as two steps: (1) MnO2→Mn2O3 corresponding to peaks at 226 °C, 263 °C and 355 °C, (2) Mn2O3→Mn3O4 corresponding to peaks at 308 °C and 377 °C, respectively. As mentioned previously13, the presence of more high-valence manganese is beneficial to the low-temperature catalytic oxidation of VOCs. Combined with the results of XRD, it can be inferred that R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite with high valence state of manganese may be the reasons for the strong reducibility and higher catalytic activity32.
Figure 9 illustrates the Mn 2p, O 1s, Ag 3d and Cl 2p XPS spectra of Ag/MnO2 catalysts. The Mn 2p peaks appeared at 642.2 eV and 641.5 eV, which are attributed to the Mn4+ and Mn3+, respectively13,33,34. Compared with R-Ag/MnO2, the chemical valence of Mn of T-Ag/MnO2 is mainly in Mn4+ oxidation state and a small quantity of Mn3+ co-existed. It has been verified that the higher extent of the Mn4+ favors the redox reactions and gives a boost to the catalytic performance of VOCs degradation35, as well as the presence of element Mn plays a facilitating role in the production of oxygen vacancies and the enhancement of oxygen mobility36. From Table 3, it could be found that the molar ratio of surface Mn4+ of R-Ag/MnO2 is higher comparing with T-Ag/MnO2, which gives rise to the fact that the nanorod Ag/MnO2 molded catalyst exhibited good catalytic activity for VOCs. In addition, Mn4+/Mn value (0.75) of RCB-Ag/MnO2 was markedly reduced because of the reduction of MnO2 to Mn2O3 during catalytic oxidation of chlorobenzene. The results were also consistent with the aforementioned XRD and H2-TPR. According to the XPS spectrum of O1s, the peak at 529.6 could be ascribed to the lattice oxygen (Olatt), while the peak at 531.7 eV could be ascribed to the adsorbed oxygen (Oads)14. As reported20,37, the atomic ratio of the Olatt/Oads could influence the catalytic oxidation of VOCs. Different oxygen species content in each catalyst was obtained according to XPS characterization (shown in the Table 3). The amount of Olatt/Oads of R-Ag/MnO2 is much higher than that of T-Ag/MnO2, suggesting that rod-like Ag/MnO2 may be beneficial to the lattice oxygen migration, which should administer to enhance the performance of R-Ag/MnO2 for the catalytic oxidation of VOCs. Besides, the Olatt/Oads value of RCB-Ag/MnO2 is significantly much less in comparison with that of R-Ag/MnO2. The result can be attributed to the fact that lattice oxygen facilitates the VOCs oxidation reaction at low temperatures.
The peaks at 373.8 eV and 367.8 eV according to the XPS spectrum of Ag 3d are assigned to the 3d5/2 and 3d3/2 of Ag, respectively, while the other two peaks at 372.9 eV and 366.8 eV are attributed to silver 3d3/2 and 3d5/2 of AgCl38,39,40,41,42. Apparently, the intensity of Ag 3d peak of R-Ag/MnO2 was significantly reduced after catalytic oxidation with chlorobenzene. Furthermore, the Cl 2p XPS spectrum of RCB-Ag/MnO2 catalyst reveals two peaks at 199.9 eV and 198.3 eV, which represent Cl 2p3/2 and Cl 2p1/2 binding energy separately39,40,41. According to the results of stability test, it is speculated that small amounts of AgCl are formed and accumulated over the catalyst surface to inactive catalyst, which may be the reason for the slight decrease in activity of R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite during the long-term reaction with chlorobenzene.
From all the characterization results, the R-Ag/MnO2-cordierite molded catalyst shows higher activity to remove VOCs than T-Ag/MnO2-cordierite molded catalyst due to several reasons. According to the XRD, H2-TPR and XPS, it’s easy to find that manganese with a high valence state could carry more lattice oxygen and possess stronger reducibility contributed to higher catalytic activity of the nanorod Ag/MnO2. Besides, it also can be seen from the results of SEM and TEM that the rod-like morphology and fine crystalline structure of catalysts determine the excellent mechanical strength and stability, thus leading to the high catalytic stability at higher space velocity. Last but not least, the presence of silver could accelerate the lattice oxygen migration on MnO2 during VOCs oxidation process, which should administer to enhance the performance of R-Ag/MnO2 for the catalytic oxidation of VOCs.
Conclusions
In this study, Ag/MnO2 with nanorod and nanotube morphology supported on honeycomb cordierite catalysts were successfully synthesized using a liquid phase reduction method. Various characterization techniques were used to investigate their physicochemical properties and the catalytic oxidation mechanism of toluene, ethyl acetate and chlorobenzene. The Ag/MnO2-cordierite molded catalyst with nanorod morphology performs much better than other catalysts because of high valence manganese oxide, more active lattice oxygen content and preferred low-temperature reducibility. Experimental results show that the nanorod Ag/MnO2-cordierite exhibits T90 for toluene, ethyl acetate and chlorobenzene conversion at 275 °C, 217 °C and 385 °C respectively under the space velocity of 10,000 h−1. For the different space velocity and catalytic stability test, nanorod Ag/MnO2-cordierite show best mechanical strength, better catalytic durability and satisfied anti-toxicity to chlorobenzene at higher space velocity. These results reveal that the molded catalyst is characterized by lower cost, higher activity and stability as well as anti-chlorine poisoning ability. It has industrial application prospects in the oxidation of different kinds of VOCs.
References
Zawadzki, M. & Okal, J. Effect of Co and Fe substitution on catalytic VOCs removal on zinc aluminate. Catalysis Today 257, 136–143, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cattod.2015.01.022 (2015).
Scirè, S. & Liotta, L. F. Supported gold catalysts for the total oxidation of volatile organic compounds. Applied Catalysis B: Environmental 125, 222–246, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2012.05.047 (2012).
Joung, H.-J. et al. Catalytic oxidation of VOCs over CNT-supported platinum nanoparticles. Applied Surface Science 290, 267–273, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2013.11.066 (2014).
Bedia, J., Rosas, J. M., Rodríguez-Mirasol, J. & Cordero, T. Pd supported on mesoporous activated carbons with high oxidation resistance as catalysts for toluene oxidation. Applied Catalysis B: Environmental 94, 8–18, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2009.10.015 (2010).
Solsona, B. et al. Total oxidation of VOCs on mesoporous iron oxide catalysts: Soft chemistry route versus hard template method. Chemical Engineering Journal 290, 273–281, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2015.12.109 (2016).
Tang, W. et al. Synergistic Effects in Porous Mn-Co Mixed Oxide Nanorods Enhance Catalytic Deep Oxidation of Benzene. Catalysis Letters 144, 1900–1910, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10562-014-1340-3 (2014).
Zeng, J., Liu, X., Wang, J., Lv, H. & Zhu, T. Catalytic oxidation of benzene over MnOx/TiO2 catalysts and the mechanism study. Journal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical 408, 221–227, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcata.2015.07.024 (2015).
Brunet, J. et al. Co-Al-Ce Mixed Oxide Materials Prepared by Hydrotalcite Way for VOCs Total Oxidation in Micro- and Semi-Pilot Scale. Materials Today: Proceedings 3, 188–193, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matpr.2016.01.055 (2016).
Aguero, F. N., Scian, A., Barbero, B. P. & Cadús, L. E. Combustion of volatile organic compounds over supported manganese oxide: Influence of the support, the precursor and the manganese loading. Catalysis Today 133-135, 493–501, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cattod.2007.11.044 (2008).
Si, W., Wang, Y., Zhao, S., Hu, F. & Li, J. A Facile Method for in Situ Preparation of the MnO2/LaMnO3 Catalyst for the Removal of Toluene. Environ Sci Technol 50, 4572–4578, https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b06255 (2016).
Kim, S. C. & Shim, W. G. Catalytic combustion of VOCs over a series of manganese oxide catalysts. Applied. Catalysis B: Environmental 98, 180–185, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2010.05.027 (2010).
Wang, F. et al. Manganese oxides with rod-, wire-, tube-, and flower-like morphologies: highly effective catalysts for the removal of toluene. Environ Sci Technol 46, 4034–4041, https://doi.org/10.1021/es204038j (2012).
Si, W. et al. A high-efficiency gamma-MnO2-like catalyst in toluene combustion. Chemical communications 51, 14977–14980, https://doi.org/10.1039/c5cc04528b (2015).
Tang, X. et al. Complete oxidation of formaldehyde over Ag/MnOx-CeO2 catalysts. Chemical Engineering Journal 118, 119–125, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2006.02.002 (2006).
Xie, S. et al. Excellent catalytic performance, thermal stability, and water resistance of 3DOM Mn2O3-supported Au-Pd alloy nanoparticles for the complete oxidation of toluene. Applied Catalysis A: General 507, 82–90, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcata.2015.09.026 (2015).
Xie, S. et al. Effect of transition metal doping on the catalytic performance of Au-Pd/3DOM Mn2O3 for the oxidation of methane and o -xylene. Applied Catalysis B: Environmental 206, 221–232, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2017.01.030 (2017).
Cao, S. et al. Bimodal mesoporous TiO2 supported Pt, Pd and Ru catalysts and their catalytic performance and deactivation mechanism for catalytic combustion of Dichloromethane (CH2Cl2). Applied Catalysis A: General 550, 20–27, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcata.2017.10.006 (2018).
Xia, Y. et al. Concurrent catalytic removal of typical volatile organic compound mixtures over Au-Pd/alpha-MnO2 nanotubes. J Environ Sci (China) 64, 276–288, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jes.2017.06.025 (2018).
Yi, H. et al. Novel synthesis of Pd-CeMnO3 perovskite based on unique ultrasonic intervention from combination of Sol-Gel and impregnation method for low temperature efficient oxidation of benzene vapour. Ultrasonics Sonochemistry 48, 418–423, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ultsonch.2018.06.009 (2018).
Li, J., Qu, Z., Qin, Y. & Wang, H. Effect of MnO2 morphology on the catalytic oxidation of toluene over Ag/MnO2 catalysts. Applied Surface Science 385, 234–240, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2016.05.114 (2016).
Yang, P., Xue, X., Meng, Z. & Zhou, R. Enhanced catalytic activity and stability of Ce doping on Cr supported HZSM-5 catalysts for deep oxidation of chlorinated volatile organic compounds. Chemical Engineering Journal 234, 203–210, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2013.08.107 (2013).
Liu, X., Chen, L., Zhu, T. & Ning, R. Catalytic oxidation of chlorobenzene over noble metals (Pd, Pt, Ru, Rh) and the distributions of polychlorinated by-products. Journal of hazardous materials 363, 90–98, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2018.09.074 (2018).
Huang, B., Lei, C., Wei, C. & Zeng, G. Chlorinated volatile organic compounds (Cl-VOCs) in environment - sources, potential human health impacts, and current remediation technologies. Environment international 71, 118–138, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2014.06.013 (2014).
Xiao, B. et al. A green and facile synthesis of Co3O4 monolithic catalyst with enhanced total oxidation of propane performance. Catalysis Communications 116, 1–4, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.catcom.2018.07.013 (2018).
Zhou, T., Li, L., Cheng, J. & Hao, Z. Preparation of binary washcoat deposited on cordierite substrate for catalytic applications. Ceramics International 36, 529–534, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ceramint.2009.09.027 (2010).
Ma, W. J. et al. Catalytic combustion of toluene over Fe-Mn mixed oxides supported on cordierite. Ceramics International 39, 277–281, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ceramint.2012.06.022 (2013).
Kan, J. et al. Performance of co-doped Mn-Ce catalysts supported on cordierite for low concentration chlorobenzene oxidation. Applied Catalysis A-General 530, 21–29, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcata.2016.11.013 (2016).
Zhang, W., Tang, A. & Xue, J. Preparation of Cr-MnOx/Cordierite and Their Properties for Catalytic Oxidation of 1, 2-Dichlorobenzene. Spectroscopy and Spectral Analysis 36, 3075–3082 (2016).
He, C., Li, P., Cheng, J., Hao, Z.-P. & Xu, Z.-P. A Comprehensive Study of Deep Catalytic Oxidation of Benzene, Toluene, Ethyl Acetate, and their Mixtures over Pd/ZSM-5 Catalyst: Mutual Effects and Kinetics. Water, Air, & Soil Pollution 209, 365–376, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11270-009-0205-7 (2009).
Hsu, S.-H., Huang, C.-S., Chung, T.-W. & Gao, S. Adsorption of chlorinated volatile organic compounds using activated carbon made from Jatropha curcas seeds. Journal of the Taiwan Institute of Chemical Engineers 45, 2526–2530, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtice.2014.05.028 (2014).
Qu, Z., Fan, R., Wang, Z., Wang, H. & Miao, L. Selective catalytic oxidation of ammonia to nitrogen over MnO2 prepared by urea-assisted hydrothermal method. Applied Surface Science 351, 573–579, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsusc.2015.05.154 (2015).
Xu, R., Wang, X., Wang, D., Zhou, K. & Li, Y. Surface structure effects in nanocrystal MnO2 and Ag/MnO2 catalytic oxidation of CO. Journal of Catalysis 237, 426–430, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcat.2005.10.026 (2006).
Piumetti, M., Fino, D. & Russo, N. Mesoporous manganese oxides prepared by solution combustion synthesis as catalysts for the total oxidation of VOCs. Applied Catalysis B: Environmental 163, 277–287, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2014.08.012 (2015).
Garcia, T. et al. Total oxidation of naphthalene using bulk manganese oxide catalysts. Applied Catalysis A: General 450, 169–177, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcata.2012.10.029 (2013).
Bin, H. C., Pan, K. L. & Chang, M. B. Catalytic oxidation of trichloroethylene from gas streams by perovskite-type catalysts. Environmental Science and Pollution Research 25, 11584–11594, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-018-1440-5 (2018).
Xing, X. et al. Synthesis of mixed Mn-Ce-O-x one dimensional nanostructures and their catalytic activity for CO oxidation. Ceramics International 41, 4675–4682, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ceramint.2014.12.014 (2015).
Farhang, Y., Taheri-Nassaj, E. & Rezaei, M. Pd doped LaSrCuO4 perovskite nano-catalysts synthesized by a novel solid state method for CO oxidation and Methane combustion. Ceramics International 44, 21499–21506, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ceramint.2018.08.211 (2018).
Dong, R. et al. Ecofriendly Synthesis and Photocatalytic Activity of Uniform Cubic Ag@AgCl Plasmonic Photocatalyst. J. Phys. Chem. C 117, 213–220, https://doi.org/10.1021/jp311970k (2013).
Dong, L., Liang, D. & Gong, R. In Situ Photoactivated AgCl/Ag Nanocomposites with Enhanced Visible Light Photocatalytic and Antibacterial Activity. Eur. J. Inorg. Chem., 3200–3208, https://doi.org/10.1002/ejic.201200172 (2012).
Ai, L., Zhang, C. & Jiang, J. Hierarchical porous AgCl@Ag hollow architectures: Self-templating synthesis and highly enhanced visible light photocatalytic activity. Applied. Catalysis B: Environmental 142, 744–751, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2013.05.053 (2013).
Sun, L., Zhang, R., Wang, Y. & Chen, W. Plasmonic Ag@AgCl Nanotubes Fabricated from Copper Nanowires as High-Performance Visible Light Photocatalyst. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 6, 14819–14826, https://doi.org/10.1021/am503345p (2014).
Sun, H. et al. Effective and regenerable Ag/4A zeolite nanocomposite for Hg0 removal from natural gas. Journal of Alloys and Compounds 762, 520–527, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jallcom.2018.05.222 (2018).
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Numbers 21776164), Major Basic Research in Shandong Province (Grant Numbers ZR2017ZC063) and Graduate Technology Innovation Project (Grant Numbers SDKDYC190215).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
Experiment and article were finished by Jianan Zhu, and instructed by Professor Peng Liang and Wenrui Zhang. Dr. Yaqing Zhang, M.S. Qiuping Qi, Professor Huawei Zhang and Dekui Sun also offer their guidance and comments for our experiments. All authors had reviewed and given approval to the final version of the manuscript.
Corresponding authors
Ethics declarations
Competing Interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher’s note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Zhu, J., Zhang, W., Qi, Q. et al. Catalytic oxidation of toluene, ethyl acetate and chlorobenzene over Ag/MnO2-cordierite molded catalyst. Sci Rep 9, 12162 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-48506-5
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-48506-5
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.