Ambient pressure photoemission spectroscopy reveals the mechanism of carbon soot oxidation in ceria-based catalysts
Títol de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Títol del volum
Col·laborador
Editor
Tribunal avaluador
Realitzat a/amb
Tipus de document
Data publicació
Editor
Condicions d'accés
item.page.rightslicense
Publicacions relacionades
Datasets relacionats
Projecte CCD
Abstract
Removing soot is one of the most important challenges in minimizing the impact of combustion engines on the environment. Catalysts based on CeO2 have proved suitable to oxidize soot due to their capacity to store and release oxygen easily while maintaining structural integrity, although their mode of operation in a complex environment involving two solid phases (catalyst and soot) and a gas phase (oxygen) is not yet fully understood. Here we provide a study of the surface/subsurface of ceria-soot and ceria-zirconia-soot mixtures under working conditions by means of near ambient pressure photoelectron spectroscopy. Soot abatement involves two cooperative routes: one occurring at the ceria-soot interface with formation of oxygen vacancies and CeIII, and another at the surface of soot mediated by active superoxide species, which result from the reaction between gas-phase O2 and oxygen vacancies. The two routes occur simultaneously and mutually reinforce each other.


