Catherine L.
Pitman
a,
Ashley M.
Pennington
a,
Todd H.
Brintlinger
b,
Daniel E.
Barlow
c,
Liam F.
Esparraguera
c,
Rhonda M.
Stroud
b,
Jeremy J.
Pietron‡
d,
Paul A.
DeSario
*c and
Debra R.
Rolison
*c
aNRL/NRC Postdoctoral Associate, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C. 20375, USA
bMaterials Science and Technology Division (Code 6300), U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C. 20375, USA
cChemistry Division (Code 6100), U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C. 20375, USA. E-mail: paul.desario@nrl.navy.mil; rolison@nrl.navy.mil
dFormer Employee, Surface Chemistry Branch (Code 6170), U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C. 20375, USA
First published on 3rd September 2020
Photodeposition of Cu nanoparticles on ceria (CeO2) aerogels generates a high surface area composite material with sufficient metallic Cu to exhibit an air-stable surface plasmon resonance. We show that balancing the surface area of the aerogel support with the Cu weight loading is a critical factor in retaining stable Cu0. At higher Cu weight loadings or with a lower support surface area, Cu aggregation is observed by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Analysis of Cu/CeO2 using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy finds a mixture of Cu2+, Cu+, and Cu0, with Cu+ at the surface. At 5 wt% Cu, Cu/CeO2 aerogels exhibit high activity for heterogeneous CO oxidation catalysis at low temperatures (94% conversion of CO at 150 °C), substantially out-performing Cu/TiO2 aerogel catalysts featuring the same weight loading of Cu on TiO2 (20% conversion of CO at 150 °C). The present study demonstrates an extension of our previous concept of stabilizing catalytic Cu nanoparticles in low oxidation states on reducing, high surface area aerogel supports. Changing the reducing power of the support modulates the catalytic activity of mixed-valent Cu nanoparticles and metal oxide support.
We recently reported stable metallic Cu0 and Cu+ content in Cu NPs photodeposited from Cu2+ salts on titania aerogels (Cu/TiO2(aero)).6 We attribute the stability of low-valent Cu to a close interaction between the oxide support and the deposited Cu NPs, made possible by the high surface area and small particle size of the oxide support. Donation of electron density from the reducing oxide to the supported metal NP stabilizes sufficient metallic Cu for Cu/TiO2(aero) to exhibit a Cu SPR.6 In contrast, Cu photodeposition on larger diameter, low surface-area particulate TiO2 (Cu/TiO2(partic)) does not produce materials that exhibit a SPR. The importance of the morphology of TiO2 in supporting a Cu SPR calls into question whether (1) other reducible metal oxides will display the same stabilization of low-valent Cu and (2) if similar morphology constraints are required when employing a more easily reducible metal oxide.
Copper NPs on CeO2 supports are extensively studied catalysts for CO oxidation,7–10 the water–gas shift reaction,11–13 and volatile organic compound oxidation.14,15 A complicating factor is that CeO2 is active on its own due to facile Ce4+/3+ redox interchange allowing the material to act as an oxygen buffer.16 This reducibility is a key feature of CeO2 catalytic cycles.
The reducibility of the metal oxide is further increased by nanostructuring the support. The formation energy of a corner oxygen vacancy in small CeO2 clusters is calculated to be as low as 0.8 eV in comparison to the 2.25 eV calculated on the extended (111) surface, the most thermodynamically stable facet of fluorite CeO2.17 This effect is attributed to the presence of under-coordinated surface sites in nanostructured supports as well as the flexibility of nanoparticles to relax around oxygen vacancies and thereby stabilize them.18 Several groups have focused on developing nanostructured CeO2 supports to produce highly defective materials, including by controlling the shape of the nanoparticles,7,8 template syntheses,19 and using specific calcination protocols.9 The addition of supported metal nanoparticles can increase the reducibility of the support by providing an electron sink to stabilize the charge produced by oxygen-vacancy generation.18 In addition to altering the reducibility of the oxide, deposition also introduces Cu‖CeO2 interfaces that are implicated in reactivity.20 The aerogel expression of the reducing oxide offers critical attributes: increased reducibility of the support through nanostructuring and more oxide NP‖Cu NP junctions.
We now show that another reducible metal oxide aerogel stabilizes metallic Cu. Using CeO2, a reducible metal oxide amenable to aerogel synthesis, we report herein that Cu/CeO2 aerogel stabilizes a significant fraction of reduced Cu species (Cu0 and Cu+) in the Cu nanoparticles. Furthermore, copper nanoparticle–modified ceria aerogel exhibits an SPR and demonstrates high activity for the low-temperature heterogeneous catalytic oxidation of carbon monoxide (CO).
In order to determine the effects of the aerogel morphology on the properties of the CeO2 support, we examined a commercially obtained particulate nanopowder ceria (CeO2(partic)). The commercial CeO2 has lower surface area (26 m2 g−1vs. 82(11) m2 g−1) and pore volume (0.09 cm3 g−1vs. 0.35(7) cm3 g−1) than the aerogel and lacks the covalent bonding between CeO2 nanoparticles present in the aerogel network. Crystalline regions averaged 21(1) nm diameter by XRD, suggesting particulate CeO2 is 2–3 times larger than the bonded CeO2 nanoparticles in the aerogel network. By SEM, particles as large as 75 nm across are observed (Fig. 1), which may comprise several crystalline domains or reflect the size range of crystallites in CeO2(partic).
Ceria has a direct band gap with an energy (Eg) that depends on crystallite size;22 the energies for CeO2(aero) and CeO2(partic) are calculated from Tauc plots of the diffuse-reflectance UV-Vis spectra (Fig. S4†). The values are 2.95 eV (420 nm) and 3.08 eV (403 nm) for CeO2(aero) and CeO2(partic), respectively. Although the CeO2(aero) crystallite size is less than the CeO2 Bohr radius (7–9 nm) and quantum confinement has been observed for dispersed CeO2 nanoparticles,23 the covalent attachment of the CeO2 crystallites in the aerogel framework likely prevents confinement. Indeed, the opposite effect is instead observed, with CeO2(aero) showing a decrease in bandgap energy compared to bulk CeO2 (3.19 eV, 389 nm). This red-shift was previously observed and attributed to the presence of surface Ce ions (in either the 4+ or 3+ oxidation states) and the presence of oxygen vacancies.24 The red-shift of the band-gap energy for CeO2(aero) relative to CeO2(partic) is consistent with this interpretation, given the smaller size of the crystallites and higher surface area of the aerogel.
Copper nanoparticles are photodeposited using a modification of the procedure described by Wu et al.25 A slurry of ethanol, water, ceria, and copper(II) nitrate at pH 9–10 is stirred under inert atmosphere while irradiating with broadband light, adjusting the ratio of Ce:Cu to achieve a nominal 2.5–10 wt% copper loading. Excitation of the CeO2 band gap leads to mobile electrons that can reduce Cu2+ adsorbed on the surface. Charge compensation is provided by oxidation of a sacrificial reagent (ethanol). To maintain the large surface area of the CeO2 support, gentle drying techniques are needed following photodeposition. When samples dried at ambient conditions are heated under vacuum, pore collapse is observed. To minimize this deleterious loss of pore volume, after collecting the solids from the photodeposition on a membrane filter, the material is first dried at ambient conditions overnight, and then dried at 70 °C for 24 h. Porosimetry of materials dried in this manner do not reveal pore collapse, although a small reduction in pore diameter occurs, consistent with partial filling of pores by Cu NPs (Fig. 2A).
Copper weight loading is assessed by X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy, comparing Cu:Ce fluorescence intensity to a standard curve of physically mixed CuO and CeO2 (both averaging <50 nm diameter particles). Copper weight loadings closely approximate the nominal weight loading (Table 1). Nominally 5 wt% Cu/CeO2 aerogel (5Cu/CeO2(aero)) has between 5.4–5.8 wt% Cu, while nominally 5 wt% Cu/CeO2 particulate (5Cu/CeO2(partic)) has 4.8–4.9 wt% Cu. The nominally 2.5 wt% and 10 wt% Cu/CeO2 aerogels ((2.5Cu/CeO2(aero) and 10Cu/CeO2(aero)), respectively) are 2.8 wt% and 10.5 wt% Cu, respectively. Following deposition, CeO2 maintains its fluorite structure, but no Cu reflections are observed at either 2.5 wt% or 5 wt% Cu loading (Fig. 2B). For 10Cu/CeO2(aero), reflections for CuO, but not Cu2O or Cu(0), are observed by XRD (Fig. S5†).
Sample | CeO2 diametera (nm) | % Cub | % Cu0,+c | Surface aread (m2 g−1) | Pore volumed (cm3 g−1) | Pore widthd (nm) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Determined via XRD, calculated across all aerogel or particulate samples. b Determined via XRF. c Determined via XPS. d Determined via desorption arm of nitrogen physisorption. | ||||||
CeO2(aero) | 8.8(14) | — | — | 79 | 0.35 | 15.7 |
2.5Cu/CeO2(aero) | 8.8(14) | 2.8 | 44(10) | 82 | 0.28 | 11.2 |
5Cu/CeO2(aero) | 8.8(14) | 5.6 | 50(19) | 83 | 0.30 | 13.0 |
10Cu/CeO2(aero) | 8.8(14) | 10.5 | 42(10) | 65 | 0.27 | 11.8 |
CeO2(partic) | 21.3(6) | — | — | 26 | 0.08 | 12.0 |
5Cu/CeO2(partic) | 21.3(6) | 4.8 | 30(10) | 31 | 0.11 | 12.6 |
For microstructural characterization, both scanning transmission electron microscopy with high-angle annular dark-field (STEM-HAADF) imaging as well as conventional high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM) imaging were performed, as seen in Fig. 3A–C. These analyses show the ceria support to be extended aerogel structures with crystallites ∼5–15 nm in size and a CeO2(111) lattice spacing of 0.31 nm, comparable to the values found by XRD. The high atomic number (Z) of Ce compared to Cu precludes an intensity-based identification and imaging of Cu NPs.
For compositional analysis, we relied on energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) and electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) (Fig. 3D–F). The EDS-measured composition (2% copper by weight) was similar to that obtained by XRF. Acquiring an unambiguous image of the Cu nanoparticle morphology was elusive—neither EDS nor EELS show significant enough signal above the Ce background that is localized to ‘nanoparticle’-type morphologies. Additional transmission electron micrographs are found in the ESI.†
When comparing Cu SPRs produced at 5 wt% Cu supported on the two metal oxide aerogels, the intensity of the SPR is brighter on TiO2 than on CeO2 (Fig. 4C), suggesting more metallic Cu is stabilized on TiO2(aero) than CeO2(aero). Notably, there is a higher absorbance between 400 nm and 600 nm on 5Cu/CeO2(aero) relative to 5Cu/TiO2(aero), which may be an indication of more Cu+ on CeO2 due to the band-gap adsorption of Cu2O at ∼580 nm.27
Ceria appears less able than TiO2 to support metallic copper given that (1) longer irradiation times are required to produce SPRs, (2) the SPR response is not as bright on CeO2 relative to TiO2, and (3) an SPR is not observed on CeO2 aerogels at ≥5 wt% Cu. As the ratio of Cu to CeO2 surface area increases, either by increasing the copper loading or by decreasing the surface area of the support, SPRs are not observed. Rather, we observe large Cu features in the SEM suggesting that the available sites for Cu nucleation have been exhausted, and that further Cu deposition results in particle growth (Fig. S11–S13†). These large copper particulates interact less extensively with the CeO2 support (have a lower ratio of interface to bulk volume), which is consistent with their oxidized state.
On a per mass basis, CeO2 has less available surface area (∼80 m2 g−1) than TiO2 (∼150 m2 g−1) to support a given weight loading of Cu NPs. On a per mole basis, however, the surface area of the two metal oxide aerogels is comparable (14000 m2 (mol CeO2)−1 to 12000 m2 (mol TiO2)−1). The disparity in atomic weight is highlighted by the fact that 10Cu/TiO2(aero) and 5Cu/CeO2(aero) both support 12 mol% Cu while 10Cu/CeO2(aero) supports 23 mol% Cu. Surface area and available nucleation sites are clearly important considerations as to whether or not the photodeposited material can support a Cu SPR. Further illustrating this surface-area dependence, when nanoparticulate supports rather than aerogel supports of either oxide are utilized, the SPR feature is absent.
In addition to surface-area effects, we use X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) to assess if differences in the Ce4+:Ce3+ ratio in the aerogel and nanoparticulate supports contribute to the differences in speciation of supported Cu NPs. In the Ce 3d region (Fig. 5A, 875 to 925 eV), the Ce4+ signature consists of 6 peaks between 882.6 eV and 916.7 eV while Ce3+ gives rise to 4 peaks between 880.6 eV and 904.1 eV.28 Recently published results have shown that with these 10 peaks in the Ce 3d region, small modifications to the peak-fitting procedure can vary the estimated Ce3+ content from 2.3% to 38.9%.29 Given the similarity of the Ce peaks in our particulate and aerogel samples, we have elected to not fit this region and qualitatively assert that, at least under vacuum conditions, both supports are dominated by Ce4+ and have similar Ce3+ content. The similarity in Ce3+ content suggests that the differences in Cu speciation that we observe are due more to the surface area and morphology of the support than to their degree of reducibility.
The differences in Cu speciation between 5Cu/CeO2(aero) and 5Cu/CeO2(partic) are apparent in the Cu 2p region of the XPS spectra (Fig. 5A, 925 to 965 eV). The Cu 2p3/2 region consists of a peak at 932 eV for Cu0 and Cu+, low-valent states indistinguishable in these spectra, and a peak at 934 eV for Cu2+. Notably, Cu2+ gives rise to a shake-up feature around 941 eV, which is more prominent for 5Cu/CeO2(partic) than 5Cu/CeO2(aero). We attempted to resolve Cu0 and Cu+ by fitting the Auger CuLMM line; however, given the mixture of oxidation states, peak broadening inherent to insulating materials, and low Cu content of our catalysts, satisfactory fits were not obtained (Fig. S14†).
To quantify the proportion of reduced Cu in these materials (Cu0 and Cu+), we use the method described by Biesinger to compare the area under the 2p3/2 and shake-up features.30 The advantage of this method is that it is insensitive to peak broadening caused by surface charging and peak shifts expected for Cu particles of different sizes on supports.31 We find a higher percentage of reduced Cu for 5Cu/CeO2(aero) (50 ± 19%) than for 5Cu/CeO2(partic) (30 ± 10%), which is consistent with the presence of an SPR on the aerogel and lack of an SPR on the particulate. For 5Cu/TiO2(aero) this method gives 30% reduced Cu, which given the prominence of the SPR, suggests that the reduced Cu is predominantly metallic. In contrast, given its lack of an SPR, the 30% reduced Cu content in 5Cu/CeO2(partic) is likely Cu+. The signal intensity of Cu (relative to Ce) for 5Cu/CeO2(partic) is also higher than for 5Cu/CeO2(aero), despite XRF confirming similar Cu loadings. This difference is expected for a support with lower surface area. XPS is a surface-sensitive technique, and a larger fraction of the surface of the low surface-area particulate is covered with Cu at the same mass loading as on the high surface-area aerogel. We observed a similar overestimation by XPS of Cu loading on TiO2(partic) supports, which have a surface area of 10 m2 g−1.32
We utilize CO as a probe molecule in attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy to interrogate the morphology and electronic structure of the photodeposited Cu. Binding modes are observed at 2099 cm−1 and 2104 cm−1 for 5Cu/CeO2(aero) and 5Cu/CeO2(partic), respectively, on 4 mg films cast on ZnSe ATR crystals under CO flow (Fig. 5B). These positions are consistent with the reported binding energy for CO on Cu+ sites. Stacchiola et al. reported a peak at 2097 cm−1, which they attributed to small islands of Cu2O on metallic Cu surfaces, and saw this mode blue-shift to 2114 cm−1 as CeO2 coverage of their Cu substrate increased.33 Both peaks are assigned to formally Cu+ species, where increasing contact with CeO2 withdraws electron density from Cu+, which reduces back-donation to bound carbonyl, and thus results in a stronger C–O bond. The weaker carbonyl stretch observed on 5Cu/CeO2(aero) (2099 cm−1) is consistent with subsurface metallic Cu underlying Cu+, as is suggested by the presence of a Cu SPR. The stronger carbonyl stretch observed on 5Cu/CeO2(partic) (2104 cm−1) shows that this Cu+ is in a less reducing environment, as is expected for a material that shows no Cu SPR and a lower fraction of reduced Cu by XPS. The smaller peak intensity on the particulate support derives from less accessible Cu surface area and larger Cu particles, as substantiated by the large Cu features observed in SEM and TEM.
At ambient temperature, no features associated with Ce4+–CO (2168 cm−1), Ce3+–CO (2161 cm−1), or Cu0–CO (2073 cm−1)33,34 are observed on any of the materials studied. Carbonyl association on these sites is expected to be weak, and typically, low temperatures are required for their observation.34
After activation, catalyst beds of CeO2(aero) show no activity for CO oxidation below 150 °C (Fig. S15†). The commercial CeO2(partic) shows slightly more activity than CeO2(aero), achieving a maximum of 15% CO conversion at 150 °C. Duplicate beds packed using catalyst from the same batch show minimal difference in activity indicating that preparation of the catalyst bed has negligible impact. Thermogravimetric analysis does not show substantial weight loss indicating that surface-adsorbed species also have a negligible impact on catalysis (Fig. S16†). Activity is consistent over multiple regeneration cycles of the bare CeO2(aero) while a small loss is observed after the first regeneration of the CeO2(partic) material (Fig. S17†). The bare supports are used as diluent in the catalyst bed of Cu/CeO2 samples, and this lack of reactivity confirms that the diluent in the catalyst bed is a minor contributor to CO oxidation.
With the addition of 5Cu/CeO2(aero) into the catalyst bed (10 mg of catalyst to 40 mg of Cu-free CeO2(aero)), at 150 °C, 94% conversion of CO is observed (3.5 molCO min−1 molCu−1). Conversion falls as the temperature is decreased, reaching 50% conversion (T50) at 91 °C (Table 2) and falling to 0.5% conversion at the lowest temperature for which we recorded data: 50 °C. The catalyst is regenerated using the same method as the activation. Upon regeneration, minimal difference in activity from the fresh bed (Fig. 6B) indicates that the catalyst is stable and not likely undergoing significant, irreversible changes during the course of the reaction.32 The catalyst is stable over four regenerations (5 cycles), lasting a total of 27.5 h on stream. At the same weight loading, the CO oxidation activity of 5Cu/CeO2(aero) far exceeds that of 5Cu/CeO2(partic) (10 mg of catalyst, 40 mg of CeO2(partic)), presumably due to the higher surface area of the aerogel and the more reduced Cu it supports.
Sample | molCO min−1 molCu−1 at 150 °C | X CO at 150 °C | T 50 (°C) |
---|---|---|---|
CeO2(aero) | — | 0.03 | — |
CeO2(partic) | — | 0.15 | — |
5Cu/CeO2(partic) | 2.4 | 0.55 | 144 |
2.5Cu/CeO2(aero) | 4.7 | 0.64 | 119 |
5Cu/CeO2(aero) | 3.5 | 0.94 | 91 |
10Cu/CeO2(aero) | 1.7 | 0.88 | 91 |
5Cu/TiO2(aero) | 0.8 | 0.20 | — |
10Cu/TiO2(aero) | 1.9 | 0.90 | 120 |
We compare the effect of Cu weight loadings on CeO2(aero) for the extent of CO conversion (Fig. 6C). Although 5Cu/CeO2(aero) shows higher CO conversion than 2.5Cu/CeO2(aero), on a Cu-normalized basis, the lower weight loading material is more active (4.7 molCO min−1 molCu−1). Increasing the weight loading to 10 wt% did not impact CO conversion, so the Cu-normalized conversion falls (1.7 molCO min−1 molCu−1). The Cu deposited for 10Cu/CeO2(aero) beyond that deposited for 5 wt% does not contribute to CO oxidation, likely because the additional Cu is mostly oxidized and contained in the large “bicone” structures observed by SEM (Fig. S11†). The large, oxidized Cu regions in 10Cu/CeO2(aero) are evidenced by the lack of an SPR in its absorption spectrum (Fig. 4B) and by the prominent CuO reflections in its XRD pattern (Fig. S5†).
We also contrast the activity of Cu/CeO2 catalysts to both 5Cu/TiO2(aero) and 10Cu/TiO2(aero) catalysts (Fig. 6D). For TiO2-based samples, the catalyst bed comprises 10 mg of active material diluted with 40 mg of TiO2(aero) (and similarly the diluent is a negligible contributor to CO oxidation activity). The pretreatment and data collection procedures are identical to those of the Cu/CeO2 materials. We find little activity for CO conversion with our 5Cu/TiO2(aero): 20% at 150 °C (0.8 molCO min−1 molCu−1) and negligible conversion below 100 °C. The 10Cu/TiO2(aero), the subject of our previous study,32 had a conversion of about 90% at 150 °C (1.9 molCO min−1 molCu−1), but conversion decreased rapidly, falling to below 50% conversion at 120 °C.
The reduction in activity upon halving the Cu weight loading on TiO2 was much more severe than the modest reduction in CO conversion observed for Cu/CeO2(aero). This reduction in activity on TiO2 may suggest that Cu0 and Cu+, which are expected to be the primary drivers of CO oxidation, may be inaccessible or that Cu particles do not contain the appropriate synergistic mixture of Cu0 and Cu+ to aid in turnover.
Despite having lower surface area and lower Cu weight loading, 5Cu/CeO2(aero) shows higher CO conversion than 10Cu/TiO2(aero). When photodepositing Cu, sufficient surface area is required to prevent the formation of Cu aggregates and to ensure the extended interaction between the metal oxide support and the Cu NPs. But with this surface area requirement met in both 5Cu/CeO2(aero) and 10Cu/TiO2(aero), the superior CO oxidation activity shown on the CeO2(aero) supports at a lower Cu weight loading is likely due to the increased reducibility of CeO2. The increased reducibility of CeO2 facilitates generation of oxygen vacancies that activate molecular O2.16–18 Activated oxygen species react with CO bound to Cu+ sites located near the oxide interface20 to facilitate CO2 generation.
The binding of CO on CeO2 and Cu/CeO2 was investigated at room temperature under anaerobic conditions (10 mL min−1 CO, 25 mL min−1 He). The sample was dried overnight under He flow prior to CO exposure. The feed stream flowed over the sample for 10 min to saturate the catalyst surface, then CO(g) was purged from the system with 25 mL min−1 He for 5 h.
Prior to reaction, the catalyst bed was activated at 150 °C (ramp rate 10 °C min−1, dwell time 30 min) in an anoxic gas stream of 1.25% CO in He (64 mL min−1). These conditions were chosen to minimize ripening, to highlight the ability of the catalyst to function without high-temperature oxidation and reduction treatments, and to facilitate comparison to earlier work.32,35,39 During reaction, the reactor was kept at atmospheric pressure while feeding 80 mL min−1 of 1% CO (Airgas, 10000 ppm), 20% O2 (Keen, 4.4 grade, 200000 ppm), and 79% He (Praxair, 5.0 UHP), giving a GHSV of 39000 h−1. The temperature was decreased stepwise at a ramp rate of 2 °C min−1. Reactor effluent was fed into an in-line GC (GC-2014, Shimadzu) equipped with a Pulsed Discharge Detector for product analysis. Reaction products were analyzed at steady state by allowing the reactor to dwell at each temperature (150 °C, 125 °C, 100 °C, 90 °C, 80 °C, 70 °C, 60 °C, and 50 °C) for 35 min. The durability and aging of the catalyst was tested via four regenerations for a total of 5 cycles.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Additional porosimetry details, XRD and UV-Vis characterization, SEM and TEM images, catalytic runs. See DOI: 10.1039/d0na00594k |
‡ Lawrence Livermore National Lab, 7000 East Avenue, Livermore, CA, 94550. |
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