Mechanisms of catalytic NO reduction mediated by gas-phase metal clusters
Abstract
Catalytic conversion of NO and CO into N2 and CO2 is imperative under the weight of the increasingly stringent emission regulations, and oxide-supported platinum group metals (PGMs, e.g., Pd, Rh, and Pt) play pivotal roles in driving this catalytic reaction. Maximizing the utilization of PGMs and developing noble-metal-free catalysts are promising strategies to face these economic and environmental issues. The key to achieving this goal lies in obtaining a fundamental understanding of the nature of active sites as well as the mechanisms that govern such catalytic conversion, while it is extremely challenging due to the complexity of real-world catalysts. Gas-phase reactions on atomic clusters under well-defined conditions are widely studied to generate active species that compositionally and functionally resemble the active sites in real-world catalysts. Moreover, cluster reactions in combination with quantum-chemical calculations can provide crucial mechanistic insights at a strictly molecular level. This review summarizes recent advances (over the past decade) in the catalytic reduction of NO by CO mediated by gas-phase metal clusters. The following three topics are discussed: (1) the adsorption and activation of NO on metal clusters, (2) the mechanisms for the selective reduction of NO to N2O by CO, and (3) the mechanisms for driving NO reduction to N2 by CO. These findings parallel the catalytic behaviors observed in related condensed-phase catalysts, and this knowledge could be pivotal for guiding the design of advanced catalytic materials in the future.

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