Understanding the multiple interactions in vanadium-based SCR catalysts during simultaneous NO x and soot abatement

The recently proposed 2-way SCRonDPF systems, which consist of selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalysts coated on diesel particulate filters (DPFs), are promising to simultaneously remove NO x and soot emissions. However, such multifunctional systems are very demanding due to the presence of various interacting phases as well as concurrent reactions competing for the same active sites. In the present study, a simple to complex strategy was employed to understand the multiple interactions during combined NO x and soot removal over a V-based SCR catalyst. First the effect of NO 2 , NO, H 2 O and NH 3 on soot oxidation was studied on soot alone and then in loose and tight contact with the V-based catalyst. In a next step, the effect of various SCR gas mixtures was investigated. For the gas – soot interplay, NO 2 , NO and NH 3 were found to exhibit a promotional, non-inhibitory and inhibitory effect on soot oxidation, respectively. Ammonia – soot interaction dominates the soot oxidation in a standard SCR gas feed if no catalyst is present, while the co-presence of NO 2 in the fast SCR gas mixture results in a faster soot oxidation. For triple-phase systems involving also the V 2 O 5 – WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst, the oxidation of soot begins only after the activation of the standard SCR gas components over the catalyst. In contrast, NO 2 directly interacts with the soot, irrespective of the presence or absence of the V-catalyst. Water was found to promote soot oxidation for all investigated reaction conditions. Interestingly, a small amount of soot was identified to enhance the NO x conversion at high temperatures. All in all, a full picture of the promotional and inhibitory effects of SCR gases on soot oxidation could be developed, which is important for further improving 2-way SCRonDPF systems.


Introduction
2][3] The diesel particulate filter (DPF) is nowadays the widely employed technology for trapping particulate matter, 4 and the downstream wellestablished selective catalytic reduction (SCR) of NO x with ammonia is applied for NO x emission control. 3,5Although such a combination can lead to very low emissions, it occupies a large volume, which is critical especially for lightduty vehicles. 6Another disadvantage entails insufficient lowtemperature activity during the engine cold start process.8][19][20][21][22][23] The more compact design can reduce the overall volume and costs significantly.Moreover, an earlier conversion of pollutants is achieved due to the faster heating of the catalytic system, if this is located closer to the engine. 11,150][11][12][13] Decreased NH 3 storage and lower NO conversion were found for a sootloaded DPF coated with a Cu-containing zeolite washcoat. 24urthermore, such catalysts are sensitive to sulfur poisoning, and therefore not optimal for applications where a high sulfur resistance is required. 14On the other hand, vanadiumbased SCR catalysts show good efficiency, are inexpensive and are sulfur resistant. 1,5,25,26Moreover, hydrocarbon and soot oxidation are promoted by conventional and more advanced V-based catalyst formulations, 27,28 making them

Materials
A vanadium-based SCR catalyst with a composition of 3 wt% V 2 O 5 -10 wt% WO 3 /TiO 2 , referred to as Vcat thereafter, was used in the present work (c.f.characterization results in the ESI: † Fig. S2 and Table S1).The catalyst was prepared by incipient wetness impregnation (IWI), as described in detail in our previous study. 47In brief, a commercial W/TiO 2 support (10 wt% WO 3 /TiO 2 , CristalACTiV™ DT-52) was used and the impregnation solution was prepared by dissolving ammonium metavanadate (Sigma-Aldrich) in deionized water with the addition of oxalic acid (Merck).The obtained sample was dried and calcined afterwards at 550 °C for 4 h in static air.
Commercial carbon black (Alfa Aesar) with a surface area of 75 m 2 g −1 was used as the reference material for the soot oxidation tests in the present study.

Catalytic tests
As detailed in Table 1, twelve SCR related gas mixtures were used to study the various interactions between the catalyst, soot and gas phase.The different gas mixtures were fed over the soot only, the catalyst only, and the soot-catalyst systems.Two catalyst-soot contact types (loose and tight contact, cf.ref. 33-35) were generated in this study, involving a low or a high number of contact points.The contact intimacy was adjusted in a qualitative manner based on mechanical processing of the two samples.To obtain a soot catalyst mixture in loose contact, 5 mg soot and 245 mg catalyst (125-250 μm) were stirred together with a spatula.
The tight contact was induced by crushing together the same amount of materials in an agate mortar and in a next step pressing and sieving the powder (125-250 μm).To ensure a sufficient soot-catalyst interface, a relatively low soot loading was applied in the present study, which allowed the investigation of their intrinsic interaction.For the dual gas-soot interaction tests, 5 mg soot was mixed with inert quartz sand (245 mg, 125-250 μm).
The employed samples (soot, catalyst and their mixtures) were placed in a quartz tube plug-flow reactor (ID = 8 mm) to carry out the experimental tests.Gases were dosed separately via mass flow controllers (Bronkhorst).Before sending it to the reactor, the gas mixture was preheated to 150 °C to avoid water condensation.The reactor was heated up from room temperature to 650 °C with a temperature ramp of 10 °C min −1 .Further details of the test protocol are summarized in Fig. S1.† A MultiGasTM 2030 FTIR gas analyzer (MKS Instruments Deutschland GmbH, Munich, Germany) was applied to analyze the gas composition after the reactor.Although a low amount was used, the loaded soot was not

Catalysis Science & Technology Paper
entirely converted in all the tests as soot traces were observed after each reaction.

Results and discussion
Soot oxidation results obtained for the inert (N 2 , Gas-1) and baseline (10% O 2 /N 2 , Gas-2) gas feeds are presented in Fig. 1.Hardly any CO or CO 2 could be detected in an inert gas atmosphere, except for the catalyst-soot tight contact system which showed 50 ppm CO + CO 2 formation at 617 °C.In this case, the oxidation of soot is probably assisted by lattice oxygen from the catalyst components.In general, the results obtained in the presence of oxygen (Gas-2) were comparable to those reported in our previous study, 47 and will be used as a baseline in the present work to assess the effects of the SCR gas components on soot oxidation.
For all activity tests conducted in the present study, the CO + CO 2 formation profiles resulting from soot oxidation consisted of several low intensity peaks (maximum <30 ppm) below 400 °C and a sharp increase up to several thousand ppm at higher temperatures.
For a better comparison, the temperature corresponding to the soot oxidation onset (T o ) and the temperature estimated at 50 ppm CO + CO 2 formation (T 50p ) were derived, as illustrated in Fig. 1.Furthermore, the total CO + CO 2 formation integrated for each test was normalized by that obtained from the oxidation of soot in 10% O 2 /N 2 (baseline gas).The obtained ratio is referred to as NTCO x thereafter.For all the conducted tests, the NTCO x (Table S2 †), T o (Table S3 †) and T 50p (Table S4 †) are summarized in the ESI.† To elucidate the multifaceted gas-soot-catalyst interactions, the evolution of all gaseous components, including C-and N-containing gases, was as well investigated in detail.

Effect of individual gas components on soot oxidation
3.1.1.NO 2 -soot-catalyst interaction.The evolution of Cand N-containing gases during exposure of the different soot-catalyst mixtures to the NO 2 -gas feed (Gas-3) is shown in Fig. 2, and compared with the corresponding results obtained in the presence of solely oxygen (Gas-2).The benchmark O 2 -soot reaction (NTCO x = 1) exhibited a T 50p of 629 °C, which decreased to 605 °C and 515 °C for the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst in loose and tight contact with the soot sample, respectively.The corresponding NTCO x values were approx. 2 and 13 times higher relative to the non-catalytic soot oxidation reaction.This is a clear indication of the promoting effect of vanadium-based SCR catalysts on soot oxidation, also supported by the literature. 28,30,47If NO 2 was added to the gas mixture, the T 50p of soot oxidation was Fig. 1 Comparison of gas evolution for (a) N 2 -containing systems and (b) O 2 -containing systems; Gas-1: N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 (inert condition); Gas-2: 10% O 2 in N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 (baseline condition).5 mg soot with 245 mg catalyst (or inert quartz sand).

Catalysis Science & Technology Paper
shifted to 468 °C even in the absence of a catalyst, in accordance with previous reports showing that NO 2 initiates soot oxidation at a lower temperature. 9,40,42,43This path is further supported by the observed reduction of NO 2 to NO, [39][40][41] which started at ca. 400 °C as shown in Fig. 2(b).Additionally, the NTCO x was noticed to be 13 times higher than the baseline condition.
Analogous to the catalytic soot oxidation by oxygen, the presence of NO 2 barely influences the oxidation reaction if the catalyst is in loose contact with the soot sample.A similar T 50p temperature (460 °C), total CO x formation and gas evolution were observed (Fig. 2(c)) to the non-catalytic soot conversion in a NO 2 + O 2 gas mixture (Fig. 2(b)).Hence, under these conditions it can be concluded that the NO 2 -soot interaction controls the oxidation reaction and not the NO 2catalyst-soot interaction.However, if the soot is in tight contact with the V-catalyst its conversion is significantly enhanced.A new T o peak with the maximum at 204 °C was observed, which was ascribed to the contribution of the oxygen from the metal oxide lattice of the catalyst.This assumption is supported by the similar T o temperatures at 202 °C and 203 °C measured for the same system in inert and baseline feeds, respectively (Table S3 †).In addition, a relatively earlier soot ignition (T 50p of 377 °C) and a high total conversion (NTCO x of 25.9) were observed.These occur simultaneously with a slight NO 2 reduction to NO above 250 °C, as shown in Fig. 2(d).The lower reduction temperature in comparison to that measured for the loose contact case (400 °C) could be due to the reoxidation of the active sites of the catalyst by NO 2 .
The contribution of NO 2 to catalyst reoxidation as well as its direct interaction with soot has already been observed in earlier studies. 40,42,43Based on the results obtained in our investigations, it is clear that the NO 2 effect is dependent on the interaction in the soot-catalyst systems, whether it is loose or tight, and as illustrated in Fig. 3.A two-fold role of NO 2 in soot oxidation, i.e. in both a direct and indirect manner, is achieved in a tight contact system whereas mainly the direct oxidation of soot by NO 2 was identified for the catalyst in loose contact with the soot particles.
3.1.2.NO-soot-catalyst interaction.Fig. 4 shows the results obtained from the NO-soot-catalyst systems.Hardly any change of NO concentration could be noticed in the investigated temperature region upon feeding the NO + O 2 -Fig. 2 Comparison of gas evolution from NO 2 -containing systems: (a) CO + CO 2 formation, the N-containing gas formation from the (b) gas-soot system, (c) gas-soot-catalyst system (loose) and (d) gas-soot-catalyst system (tight).Gas-3: 500 ppm NO 2 , 10% O 2 in N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 .5 mg soot with 245 mg catalyst (or inert quartz sand).process.Consequently, a lower T 50p temperature of 550 °C (Fig. 4(a)) and a higher NTCO x of 5.2 were observed for the loose contact system.A further decrease of the NO 2 concentration was measured if the catalyst was in tight contact with the soot sample (Fig. 4(d)), i.e. 42 ppm NO 2 at 420 °C.As a result, the T 50p dropped to 474 °C and an even higher NTCO x value of 20.4 was recorded.These results further confirm that the direct NO-soot reaction does not take place, as NO needs to be catalytically first converted to NO 2 before contributing to soot oxidation.
3.1.3.NH 3 -soot-catalyst interaction.Gaseous ammonia which typically originates from the decomposition of ureawater solution is commonly used as a reductant for the selective catalytic reduction of NO x in diesel engines. 1,2g. 4 Comparison of gas evolution from NO-containing systems: (a) CO + CO 2 formation, the N-containing gas formation from the (b) gas-soot system, (c) gas-catalyst system and (d) gas-soot-catalyst systems (loose and tight).Gas-4: 500 ppm NO, 10% O 2 in N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 .5 mg soot with 245 mg catalyst (or inert quartz sand).
Fig. 5 Comparison of gas evolution from ammonia-containing systems: (a) CO + CO 2 formation, the N-containing gas formation from the (b) gas-soot system, (c) gas-catalyst system and (d) gas-soot-catalyst systems (loose and tight).Gas-5: 500 ppm NH 3 , 10% O 2 in N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 .5 mg soot with 245 mg catalyst (or inert quartz sand).
Therefore, the ammonia-soot-catalyst triple-phase interactions were studied in a next step in the present work, and the obtained results are presented in Fig. 5. Upon feeding the ammonia gas mixture (Gas-5) over the soot sample, the ammonia concentration decreased above 300 °C (Fig. 5(b)), suggesting the occurrence of soot promoted ammonia conversion. 9,13NO was detected as the main product accompanied by several ppm of NO 2 .In comparison to the soot oxidation in the O 2 -only gas mixture, a higher soot ignition temperature (T 50p of 649 °C) and a lower NTCO x value of only 0.4 were measured.According to Trandafilović et al., 13 this inhibitory effect of ammonia on soot oxidation could be ascribed to the blockage of the soot surface by the amides formed as intermediates.
When the ammonia gas mixture (Gas-5) was dosed directly to the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst, two desorption peaks were observed during light-off (Fig. 5(c)).The peaks at 186 °C and 232 °C can be assigned to physisorbed ammonia and ammonia stored on weak acidic sites, respectively. 1,48The latter feature is in line with the well-known acidity of vanadium-based SCR catalysts leading to ammonia storage. 1,25Ammonia concentration decreased rapidly with temperature, with full conversion achieved at around 400 °C.N 2 O as an oxidation product was detected from ca. 300 °C while NO and NO 2 above 500 °C.During soot oxidation in the ammonia triple-phase system (Fig. 5(d)), no pronounced variation in the evolution of gases was observed in comparison to the ammonia-catalyst dual-phase system (Fig. 5(c)).This indicates that the gaseous ammonia preferentially interacts with the catalyst instead of the soot.Only a shift to higher temperatures in the ammonia desorption profile was noticed, which was more pronounced for the catalyst-soot tight contact system.Part of the NO 2 formed by NH 3 oxidation over the V-catalyst seems to react with the soot sample.On the one hand, this reaction is suggested by the lower NO 2 concentration detected at the end of the plug-flow reactor.Only approx.12 ppm NO 2 was detected at 650 °C for the triple-phase systems (both loose and tight contact) in comparison to 21 ppm measured for the ammonia-catalyst dual-phase system (Fig. 5(c)).At the same time, an enhanced soot oxidation performance was achieved for ammonia fed loose and tight catalyst-soot systems, with lower T 50p values of 573 °C and 496 °C, respectively.The obtained results indicate that even if ammonia itself inhibits the soot oxidation, the presence of the V-catalyst promotes the overall soot oxidation in an NH 3 + O 2 gas mixture via catalytic NO 2 formation.
3.1.4.H 2 O-soot-catalyst interaction.The CO + CO 2 formation results obtained for the water-soot-catalyst systems are presented in Fig. 6.During direct exposure of the soot sample to the H 2 O + O 2 gas mixture (Gas-6), the T 50p decreased by about 27 °C in comparison to that measured for the reference O 2 -only conditions.The lower soot ignition temperature could be ascribed to the closer contact between soot particles as a result of the water wetting effect 49 as well as due to the formation of reactive O-species on the soot surface.The presence of water showed an additional positive influence on soot oxidation over the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst.The T 50p of the water-soot-catalyst system in loose and tight contact was about 47 °C and 45 °C, respectively, which are lower in comparison those measured in the oxygen-only gas mixture.It seems that the water presence does not only strengthen the contact between soot particles, but also the soot-catalyst contact.Moreover, the OH groups generated on the catalyst surface could also participate in and enhance the soot oxidation. 41,50Accordingly, relatively higher NTCO x values of 8.4 and 26.7 were achieved for the water-sootcatalyst systems in loose and tight contact, respectively.
As a next step, the presence of water (additionally 5% H 2 O) in the NO-and NO 2 -containing gas feeds (Gas-7 and Gas-8, respectively) was investigated over the soot-catalyst systems (complete data sets depicted in Fig. S3 and S4 †).Similarly, in those cases water addition promoted soot oxidation.Notably, for the case of soot-catalyst in loose contact the T 50p was significantly shifted to lower temperatures, which were around 40 °C and 70 °C lower for NO-and NO 2 -containing gas feeds, respectively (Table S4 †).At the same time, for both NO-and NO 2 -containing gas feeds the normalized total CO x formations were almost two times higher under wet conditions compared to those in a dry reaction atmosphere (Table S2 †).

3.2.
Influence of SCR gas feeds on soot oxidation 3.2.1.Standard SCR gas-soot-catalyst interaction.In addition to the influence of individual gas components, the effect of the dry standard SCR gas mixture (500 ppm NO, 500 ppm NH 3 , 10% O 2 in N 2 ) on soot oxidation was investigated and the obtained results are presented in Fig. 7.In comparison to soot oxidation in oxygen, a higher ignition temperature (T 50p of 648 °C) was observed when dosing the dry standard SCR gas mixture over the soot sample (Fig. 7(a)).This behavior is most probably due to the presence of NH 3 , which has been shown to inhibit the soot oxidation (Fig. 5).Hardly any NO conversion was observed, whereas NH 3 was oxidized to NO above 300 °C (Fig. 7(b)), in line with the literature 44 and our results for the ammonia- Catalysis Science & Technology Paper oxygen-soot system (Fig. 5(b)).This suggests that the ammonia-soot interaction plays a key role in soot oxidation in the dry standard SCR mixture.
After feeding the same gas mixture to the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst (Fig. 7(c)), an ammonia desorption peak at 180 °C was observed.Afterwards, the gas composition changes as a result of the SCR reactions during heating the reactor. 27,28,51mmonia is fully oxidized above 400 °C, whereas NO x conversion drops in the same temperature range.Additionally, NO 2 is formed reaching a concentration of 52.6 ppm at 550 °C.The addition of soot to the standard SCR gas-catalyst system did not significantly affect the NO x removal activity of the V-catalyst (Fig. 7(d)) in comparison to the gas-catalyst system (Fig. 7(c)).Only the ammonia desorption peaks showed a lower intensity and shifted to higher temperatures, i.e. 260 °C and 275 °C for loose and tight contact, respectively.This could be ascribed to the soot interaction with the catalyst surface.Similar to the standard SCR-catalyst reactions, complete ammonia conversion was found above 400 °C.Under these conditions, only 27.7 ppm NO 2 was detected at 550 °C for the loose contact system, and even less for the case of tight soot-catalyst contact.In contrast to the gas-soot dual-phase system, the soot oxidation was initiated at a lower temperature after mixing with the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst.This seems to be caused not only by the soot-catalyst interaction, but also by the Fig. 7 Comparison of gas evolution from dry standard SCR gas-containing systems: (a) CO + CO 2 formation, the N-containing gas formation from the (b) gas-soot system, (c) gas-catalyst system and (d) gas-soot-catalyst systems (loose and tight).Gas-9: 500 ppm NO, 500 ppm NH 3 , 10% O 2 in N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 .5 mg soot with 245 mg catalyst (or inert quartz sand).
Fig. 8 Comparison of gas evolution from dry fast SCR gas-containing systems: (a) CO + CO 2 formation, the N-containing gas formation from the (b) gas-soot system, (c) gas-catalyst system and (d) gas-soot-catalyst systems (loose and tight).Gas-11: 250 ppm NO, 250 ppm NO 2 , 500 ppm NH 3 , 10% O 2 in N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 .5 mg soot with 245 mg catalyst (or inert quartz sand).
This journal is © The Royal Chemistry 2022 diminishment of ammonia concentration and the appearance of NO 2 .Hence, lower ignition temperatures were measured for both loose and tight contact systems, with T 50p of 559 °C and 467 °C respectively, in comparison to the corresponding systems during oxidation by O 2 only (Fig. 7(a) ).
3.2.2.Fast SCR gas-soot-catalyst interaction.Complementary to the results shown in the previous section, Fig. 8 depicts the results obtained in a dry fast SCR gas mixture (250 ppm NO, 250 ppm NO 2 , 500 ppm NH 3 , 10% O 2 in N 2 ).for the gas-soot dual-phase system, the occurrence of both ammonia and NO 2 interactions with the soot is illustrated by their gradually decreasing concentrations (Fig. 8(b)).Similar to the results obtained during soot oxidation by NO 2 , a lower T 50p temperature was measured for soot oxidation in the fast SCR gas mixture in comparison to the baseline condition in oxygen (T 50p = 629 °C, Table S4 †).However, the simultaneous presence of the ammonia-soot interaction led to relatively lower CO x formation in the high temperature region.An NTCO x value of 2.9 was obtained, which is higher than that measured in the presence of ammonia (NTCO x of 0.4), however, lower than that obtained in the presence of NO 2 -only (NTCO x of 12.7).The obtained results suggest that in a dry fast SCR gas feed the promotional effect of NO 2 offsets the inhibition effect of ammonia and results in an overall enhancement effect on soot oxidation.
In the presence of VWTi (Fig. 8(c)), the fast SCR reaction ignites already at very low temperatures (approx.80% NO x conversion at 150 °C) and hardly any ammonia emission could be detected in the investigated temperature range.NO and NO 2 , which could not be detected below 400 °C, appeared at higher temperatures.Analogous to the dry standard SCR conditions, the simultaneous soot oxidation does not significantly affect the fast SCR activity (Fig. 8(d) in comparison to Fig. 8(c)).After modification over the catalyst surface due to the fast SCR reaction, the resulting gas mixture exhibited a further promotional effect on soot oxidation in the triple-phase systems.As shown in Fig. 8(a), rather low T 50p values of 548 °C and 468 °C were achieved for the fast SCR gas-soot-catalyst systems with loose and tight contact, respectively.

Influence of soot on SCR of NO x with ammonia
With respect to the water presence, its promoting effect was noticed during soot oxidation in the wet standard and fast SCR gas mixtures (additionally 5 vol% H 2 O) in the presence or absence of a catalyst, and the results are shown in Fig. S5 and S6, † respectively.As discussed previously, the water promoting influence is claimed to be due to a wetting effect which enhances the contact between soot and reactants. 49dditionally, active OH groups or other O-species are formed, which enhance soot oxidation. 41,50,52The influence of soot on the NO x conversion during both standard and fast SCR is summarized in Fig. 9 for the wet conditions (5% H 2 O); the corresponding results for dry conditions are presented in Fig. S7.† Hardly any NO x conversion was observed for the standard SCR gas feed over the soot, as shown in Fig. 9(a).However, a NO x conversion of up to 10% was detected in the fast SCR gas mixture between 200 and 450 °C, as shown in Fig. 9(b).This result is in agreement with a previous report by Mehring et al., 44 who suggested that the adsorbed NO 2 is firstly activated via the strong interaction with soot, then further reacts with the NH 3 and NO species.
Although the catalytic tests were performed in transient mode, the obtained NO x conversion results over the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst are comparable to our previous steadystate experiments. 27Full conversion was achieved between 250-400 °C and 200-450 °C for standard and fast SCR, respectively.Hardly any influence could be noticed at low and middle temperatures in the presence of soot.Moreover, an improvement of NO x conversion was measured at high temperatures, regardless of the soot-catalyst contact type.The typical decrease in activity above approx.450 °C appearing for VWTi catalysts was shifted for both standard (at 50% NO x conversion from 541 °C to 577 °C) and fast (from 552 °C to 582 °C) SCR conditions towards higher temperatures (Fig. 9(a) and (b)).Such a promoting effect could be explained by the additional consumption of This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.

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N-containing gases by reactions soot, as for example the NO 2 -soot reaction (Fig. 7(d) and 8(d)).At these high temperatures, the NO x conversion profile of the soot-catalyst in tight contact overlaps the one of the soot-catalyst system in loose contact, suggesting a minimal influence of the soot-VWTi interface.However, a very low soot loading (soot/ catalyst ratio of 1/49) was applied in the present study and different effects need to be considered at higher soot loadings, e.g. the or blockage of catalyst active sites which might lead to a lower SCR activity. 9,45

Summary of the contribution of individual gas components and SCR gas feeds to soot oxidation
To disentangle the influence of SCR gas mixtures on soot oxidation, the effects of different individual components were systematically investigated in our study, as summarized in Fig. 10.This included the direct interaction between soot and specific gases as well as the soot-gas-catalyst triple-phase system.Even for catalyst coated DPFs, non-catalytic oxidation reactions have a major contribution especially for a large soot layer thickness or poor catalyst-soot interaction.As shown in Fig. 10, NO 2 was found to show an excellent soot oxidation ability, whereas NO neither promotes nor inhibits the soot oxidation reaction.This is illustrated by the lowest T 50p temperature obtained for soot oxidation in a wet gas mixture containing NO 2 and O 2 (Fig. 10).Neeft and coworkers studied non-catalyzed diesel soot oxidation and reported that the reaction order is slightly lower than 1 with respect to the oxygen concentration. 53Herein, O 2 participates mostly above 450-500 °C, whereas NO 2 was found to decrease the onset temperature of soot oxidation.A further enhancement was observed in NO 2 + O 2 gas mixtures, with NO 2 initiating the reaction by formation of active surface oxygen complexes. 40ore active oxygen species can be generated if water is present that strengthens soot oxidation, 52 which is in line with the results obtained in our study.With respect to the NH 3 presence, an inhibitory effect was unraveled for the noncatalytic soot oxidation by O 2 , which is retained for most gas mixtures containing NH 3 .According to previous literature, ammonia interacts with soot and the formation of amine/ amide intermediates blocks the soot surface and inhibits the oxidation reactions. 13n a combined 2-way SCRonDPF system maintaining a high NO x reduction performance in long-term is dependent on a good soot oxidation activity, which prevents the growth of a diffusive barrier layer on the catalyst surface. 24The reaction mechanism of soot oxidation is influenced by various parameters such as the catalyst composition, the soot-catalyst contact and the reaction atmosphere. 234][35][36][37][38] The results obtained in the present study demonstrate that if a vanadium-based catalyst is involved, both NO-and NH 3 -containing gas mixtures need to be in a first step activated over the catalyst, resulting in NO 2 formation, before they can participate in the soot oxidation reaction.For the case of the NO 2 -gas mixture, it could be elucidated that NO 2 does not react over the catalyst but directly interacts with the soot due to its stronger oxidation ability.
However, NO 2 seems to additionally contribute to the reoxidation of V-species, which was found relevant only for the catalyst in tight contact with the soot sample.Thus, a T 50p temperature of 377 °C was measured in the presence of a catalyst during the catalytic soot oxidation by NO 2 + O 2 in comparison to 468 °C observed in the absence of a V-catalyst.Notably, an additional promotional effect on soot oxidation was noticed under wet conditions (additionally 5% H 2 O, Fig. S5 and S6 †).Based on our investigations, Fig. 11(a) summarizes the effects of the individual SCR-related gas components (NO 2 , NO, NH 3 and H 2 O) on the soot oxidation, with and without the presence of the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst.
Regarding the impact of complete standard and fast SCR gas mixtures on soot oxidation, Mihai et al. 9 showed that a higher soot conversion can be obtained above 400 °C in both standard and fast SCR gas mixtures if the DPF is coated with This journal is © The Royal Society 2022 a Cu-zeolite catalyst.In contrast, the oxidation of soot under the fast SCR feed is initiated at a lower temperature (approx.200 °C lower) in the absence of a catalyst.Similar results were reported by Schobig et al. 45 for an integrated vanadiabased SCR catalyst, as they observed no significant impact on NO x reduction but a decreased carbon oxidation rate (up to approx.a 20% decrease) at temperatures below 400 °C in the fast SCR feed.For the results obtained in this study, Fig. 11(b) shows the overview of the multiple effects appearing during simultaneous SCR of NO x and soot oxidation with and without the presence of the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 / TiO 2 catalyst.For gas-soot dual-phase systems, the dry standard SCR feed was found to exhibit an inhibitory effect on soot oxidation as a result of ammonia-soot interaction.
Thus, a T 50p temperature of 648 °C was measured in the dry standard SCR conditions, which is 49 °C higher than that measured in the NO + O 2 mixture (Fig. 10).However, in the dry fast SCR gas mixture, due to the co-presence of NO 2 -soot interaction in addition to the ammonia-soot interaction, a lower onset temperature was observed for soot oxidation as compared to the corresponding standard SCR conditions (Fig. 10: T 50p of 522 °C versus 648 °C, respectively).This is supported by observations of Mihai and coworkers for a DPF coated with a Cu-zeolite catalyst. 9If the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst is added into the triple-phase system, both standard and fast SCR reactions are favored over the catalyst surface.Mainly at higher temperatures, the resulting gas mixtures participate in the soot oxidation, further supporting the promotional effect of the catalyst.
In general, we noticed that the soot-catalyst systems in tight contact exhibit lower soot ignition temperatures (Fig. 10), as well as higher soot conversions (Fig. 12) in comparison to systems in loose contact, regardless of the feed composition.4][35][36][37][38] Meanwhile, a high number of soot-catalyst contact points does not seem to affect the NO x conversion, as illustrated in Fig. 9.For real applications, however, a tight soot-catalyst interaction involving multiple interaction points is expected only for the first soot layers deposited on the catalyst surface.The fingerprint of such a contact is relevant only if the location of the SCRonDPF system ensures a sufficiently high temperature to avoid considerable soot accumulation.For all other cases, the results obtained in our study for a soot-catalyst loose contact are directly transferable.
Similar to that observed for the individual gas components, the soot oxidation activity can be additionally enhanced by the presence of water (Fig. S5 and S6 †), possibly also due to the formation of reactive O-species on the catalyst surface.In our study, a decrease from 559 °C to 532 °C was measured for T 50p upon H 2 O addition into the soot-standard Fig. 12 Comparison of the normalized total CO x formation (NTCO x ) upon dosage of various SCR-related gas mixtures to different soot-catalyst contact types including soot-only (black) and soot-catalyst in both loose (green) and tight (blue) contact.The CO + CO 2 formation in all cases were normalized to the value obtained from the O 2 -soot reaction (benchmark).The gas mixtures are listed in Table 1.
SCR-catalyst Under fast SCR conditions, a 16 °C lower T 50p was noticed in wet condition in comparison to the corresponding dry condition (Fig. 10).

CO 2 selectivity during soot oxidation
The pronounced effect of the reaction conditions on the soot oxidation activity is summarized in Fig. 12, with respect to the calculated NTCO x values for various parameters investigated in our study.In general, the NO 2 presence did not only help to lower the onset temperature but also led to the highest soot conversion.The benefits resulting from the VWTi catalyst presence are obvious under both standard and fast SCR conditions, with a higher soot conversion obtained for tight soot-catalyst contact.In comparison to a loose catalyst-soot interaction, NTCO x increased from 4.9 to 20.6 for the dry standard SCR conditions and from 6.6 to 22.9 for the dry fast SCR reaction.Finally, although a high soot oxidation ability is desired, the selectivity towards CO 2 formation is equally important, and CO formation as an undesired product should be minimized.The total CO 2 formation relative to the corresponding total CO + CO 2 formation is summarized in Fig. 13 for all the different gassoot-catalyst reactions obtained in the present work.Although some minor variations were observed, an average CO 2 selectivity of 78.5% was obtained.This suggests that the investigated gas atmosphere, the presence of the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 / TiO 2 catalyst and the soot-catalyst contact type do not significantly affect the product distribution.According to our results, the mechanism seems to ultimately involve the oxidation of soot by catalyst lattice oxygen, O 2 , NO 2 or OH groups, which are present or in situ generated over the catalyst surface for all reaction conditions reported in Fig. 13.These species are known to contribute not only to the noncatalytic or catalytic oxidation of soot to CO but also to sustaining CO oxidation.Hence, any increase in their concentration affects the kinetics of both processes, which might explain the constant ratio between total CO 2 and total CO + CO 2 concentrations.

Conclusions
A simple to complex strategy, i.e. from gas-soot and gascatalyst dual-phase system to gas-soot-catalyst triple-phase system investigation, was adopted in the present work to establish a fundamental understanding of the multiple interactions between the SCR gas mixtures, the vanadiumbased SCR catalyst and the deposited soot, which is highly relevant for the application of integrated 2-way SCRonDPF systems.For gas-soot dual-phase interaction the following trends could be confirmed in our study: NO 2 exhibits an excellent soot oxidation ability whereas ammonia shows an inhibition effect; the NO presence neither promotes nor inhibits the soot oxidation reaction.In a standard SCR feed, ammonia was found to dominate the gas-soot interaction, which leads to about 20 °C higher soot oxidation temperature (based on T 50p values) compared to that obtained in the 10% O 2 /N 2 feed (baseline condition).Meanwhile, the co-presence of NO 2 in the fast SCR gas mixture promotes soot conversion, with the temperature of 50 ppm CO + CO 2 formation approx. 100 °C lower than that measured for the baseline condition.Water was observed to enhance soot oxidation in all investigated gas mixtures, decreasing T 50p by 20-30 °C in comparison to the corresponding dry conditions.With respect to the conversion of SCR-related gases, a NO x conversion up to 10% was noticed when exposing the fast SCR gas mixture directly to the soot.However, this reaction does not seem to occur in the standard SCR feed.
As for the triple-phase systems involving the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 / TiO 2 catalyst, the NO + O 2 -, NH 3 + O 2 -, standard SCR-and fast SCR-containing gas mixtures were firstly activated over the catalyst and only subsequently involved in the soot oxidation reactions.Only NO 2 was identified to directly interact with soot due to its strong oxidation ability.Furthermore, catalyst reoxidation by NO 2 was recognized as an additional beneficial facet for the soot-catalyst system in tight contact.Interestingly, a small amount of soot used in the present study was found to maintain a relatively high NO x conversion above 450 °C irrespective of the soot catalyst contact type.Thus, 50% NO x conversion was obtained at 577 °C in the standard SCR feed and at 582 °C under fast SCR conditions for the catalyst-soot system in comparison to 541 °C and 552 °C temperature points measured for the same catalyst in the absence of soot.Taken together, the systematic results obtained in the present study contribute to a comprehensive understanding of the multiple interactions and effects occurring in integrated 2-way SCRonDPF systems based on VWTi catalysts.For real SCRonDPF applications, particularly, cases involving a loose catalyst-soot contact may be relevant considering the limited number of interaction points even at moderate soot layer thicknesses.

Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts to declare.Fig. 13 The total CO 2 formation as a function of the corresponding total CO + CO 2 formation over different gas-soot-catalyst systems.The gas mixtures are listed in Table 1.

Catalysis Science & Technology
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Fig. 3
Fig. 3 Comparison of the different NO 2 responses from NO 2 -soot-catalyst systems in (a) loose and (b) tight contact.

Fig. 9
Fig. 9 Comparison of NO x conversion from (a) wet standard SCR and (b) wet fast SCR over different gas-soot-catalyst systems.Wet standard SCR: 500 ppm NO, 500 ppm NH 3 , 5% H 2 O, 10% O 2 in N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 ; wet fast SCR: 250 ppm NO, 250 ppm NO 2 , 500 ppm NH 3 , 5% H 2 O, 10% O 2 in N 2 with a total gas flow of 300 mL min −1 .5 mg soot with 245 mg catalyst (or inert quartz sand).

Fig. 11
Fig. 11 (a) Summary of individual gas components' (NO 2 , NO, NH 3 and H 2 O) effect on soot oxidation with and without the presence of the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst; (b) summary of the SCR feed (including standard and fast SCR) effect on soot oxidation with and without the presence of the V 2 O 5 -WO 3 /TiO 2 catalyst.

Table 1
List of 12 selected SCR-related gas mixtures applied in the present study