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Bibliometric study on the application of manganese dioxide in environmental catalysis worldwide from 1991 to 2021

Yaoguang Guo a, Qianqian Chen a, Xiaohu Sun a, Yujing Liu a, Jie Guan *a, Xiaojiao Zhang a, Nuo Liu a, Xiaoyi Lou *b, Yingshun Li c and Xiangwen Zhang d
aShanghai Collaborative Innovation Centre for WEEE Recycling, School of Resources and Environmental Engineering, Shanghai Polytechnic University, Shanghai 201209, China. E-mail: guanjie@sspu.edu.cn
bLaboratory of Quality Safety and Processing for Aquatic Product, East Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences, Shanghai 200090, China. E-mail: huoxingmayi@126.com
cShanghai Xin Jinqiao Environmental Protection Co., Ltd, Shanghai 201201, China
dSafety Production Association of Pudong New Area, Shanghai, 201201, China

Received 10th November 2022 , Accepted 2nd January 2023

First published on 4th January 2023


Abstract

Since the 21st century, manganese dioxide (MnO2) has been attracting increasing attention in the environmental and energy fields due to its excellent catalytic oxidation properties. To better grasp the development and trend of MnO2 in the field of environmental catalysis, the published literature studies in the Science Citation Index Expanded database in the Web of Science Core Collection from 1991 to 2021 with a total of 1133 articles and reviews were analyzed by using visualization software of CiteSpace and VOSviewer. The results show an exponential growth in the number of papers related to MnO2 in the environmental catalysis field, with China, USA, India, South Korea and Australia providing the main drivers, while China being the most active country, with Applied Catalysis B-Environmental, Environmental Science & Technology, Catalysis Today and Chemical Engineering Journal being the most important sources for publishing relevant research. At present, a more complete theoretical framework and research methods have been formed for MnO2 environmental catalysis worldwide, but the research network is too centralized and the frontier branches are few. The catalytic research on MnO2 has been expanded from the macroscopic level to the microscopic scale. Structure–activity relationship, density functional theory, catalytic oxidation and mechanism have become the frontier of research. The present study is of significance for better understanding and supporting further research on the MnO2 environmental catalytic process.



Environmental significance

As an important environment-benign transition metal oxide, MnO2 has a wide range of promising applications in electrode materials, electrochromism, catalysis, biosensors, etc. To date, there are more than 1000 published papers related to MnO2 in environmental catalysis according to the Web of Science (WoS), one of the largest databases of peer-reviewed academic literature from Clarivate Analytics. However, there are rarely reports on analyzing the current status of MnO2 research in the field of environmental catalysis from a bibliometric perspective. As the environmental and energy fields continue to evolve, MnO2 environmental catalysis has become a new hot research frontier. Therefore, an analysis of the current state of this field is essential, and bibliometrics can provide a new approach to identify the evolution of research hotspots and frontiers in this topic. The results of the present study are of significance for better understanding and supporting further research on MnO2 catalytic processes, and add new aspects to the field of environmental science.

1. Introduction

Since Antonsson et al.1 selectively formed substituted cyclopentane derivatives in the presence of Pd(OAc)2-MnO2-benzoquinone as the catalyst in 1986, manganese dioxide (MnO2) has been capturing more and more attention worldwide. As an important environment-benign transition metal oxide, MnO2 has the advantages of abundant reserves, diverse morphology, rich crystalline forms and controllable grain sizes, and has a wide range of promising applications in electrode materials,2–4 electrochromism,5 catalysis,6–8 biosensors,9–11etc.

To date, there are more than 4000 published papers related to MnO2 in catalysis according to the Web of Science (WoS), one of the largest databases of peer-reviewed academic literature from Clarivate Analytics. Among them, there are more than 1000 papers on the application of MnO2 in environmental catalysis. As the environmental and energy fields continue to evolve, MnO2 research in the field of environmental catalysis has become a new hot research frontier. However, there are rarely reports that analyze the current status of MnO2 research in the field of environmental catalysis from a bibliometric perspective. Therefore, an analysis of the current state of this field is essential, and bibliometrics can provide a new approach to identify the evolution of research hotspots and frontiers in this topic.

Bibliometrics is the quantitative analysis of the development of a research topic using mathematical and statistical methods,12 which has been adopted by many disciplines for its macroscopic research advantages of objectivity, quantification, and modeling.13 A research field can be analyzed by using visualization methods and mapped knowledge domain analysis to evaluate the current research situations, and evolutionary trajectory and predict the trend of a research field.12

In this study, literature data including titles, authors, institutions, journals, keywords, and references are processed by bibliometric methods, and these literature data can directly produce citation networks, co-occurrence networks, and coupling networks for further analysis. Data sources and research methods are described firstly. Following this, publication trends, source journal analysis, author contributions and collaborations, keyword co-occurrence analysis, co-citation analysis, and research frontiers and hotspots are comprehensively analyzed. The present study is significant for providing new insights into further research on MnO2 environmental catalysis.

2. Data and methods

2.1 Data retrieval

Data were retrieved from the Web of Science Core Collection (WoS CC). The searches are limited to the SCI-Expanded database with strict review criteria and collecting peer-reviewed scientific papers, which ensures the high quality and representativeness of the selected papers used for this study.14 “MnO2” and “Manganese Dioxide” as search terms are connected by the Boolean operator “OR”, and the search results “cataly*” and “environment*” are connected by the Boolean operator “AND” to filter the documents. In addition, the language is further limited to English, and the document type is restricted to “article” and “review”. In order to collect all relevant papers, the time span of the search was set to “all years”, from 1950 to the date of the search (December 31, 2021). Finally, the titles and abstracts of all publications were manually reviewed to remove the irrelevant ones, and a total of 1133 relevant papers were obtained, which were written by 5107 authors from 72 countries/regions and spanned 1087 institutions.

2.2 Methods

Bibliometrics has covered structural, dynamic, evaluative, and predictive scientometrics.15 After data collected from the WoS Core Collection, including the number of publications, authors, institutions, countries/territories, citations, etc., the analysis was performed by tabulation and visual mapping. In addition, knowledge domain maps of author contributions and collaborations, journal co-citations, and keyword co-occurrence were created using the VOSviewer software package.12,16 Reference co-citation knowledge domain maps and keyword timelines were created using the Citespace software package.16

3. Results and discussion

3.1 Yearly quantitative distribution of the literature

Statistical analysis of the publication year provides a clear picture of the trend of scientific output, development and maturity of a research field. Fig. 1 shows the output distribution of MnO2 in catalysis research based on time series. In general, from 1991, when the first article was published, to 2021, MnO2 has been active in the field of environmental catalysis, with increased published articles each year, which can be roughly divided into three stages: (1) the initial stage (1991–1999): the total publications (TP) increased slowly with the year, from 1 in 1991 to 7 in 1999, with an average of 6 publications per year. (2) the primary growth stage (2000–2008): the number of total publications in this period peaked in 2007 with 15 papers, and the lowest annual number of publications was 6 in 2002 though. Between 2000 and 2008, the average annual number of papers was 12, which is higher than the average annual publication in the initial phase, but the overall research progress is still relatively slow, and more papers are expected to be published in the following years. (3) The rapid development stage (2009–2021): the number of papers published per year increased sharply during this period, from 23 published in 2009 to 185 published in 2021, with 82.4 average annual publications.
image file: d2va00276k-f1.tif
Fig. 1 Annual variation curves for published articles on MnO2 environmental catalysis.

Annual publications from the top 11 countries are also presented in Fig. 1. It can be seen that the research on MnO2 environmental catalysis in China has been increasing year by year since 1997, while the number of published papers in the USA, India, South Korea, Australia, Germany, Japan, France, England and Spain is showing a fluctuating growth trend. Moreover, the cumulative number of publications showed an exponential growth.

3.2 Source journal analysis

Journals are the most important source of scholarly communication and dissemination of scientific results, and journal analysis can be conducted to identify influential journals in the field. The retrieved results show that 1133 papers have been published in 309 journals, covering research areas such as catalytic chemistry, environmental chemistry, engineering and materials, and energy chemistry. Table 1 lists the top 11 prolific journals that published more than 17 articles related to MnO2 environmental catalysis, and they are all included in SCI/SCIE. The Applied Catalysis B-Environmental (ACB-E) is a professional journal, which publishes experimental, theoretical and computational research related to new technologies and catalysts for catalytic combustion. With 174 papers, about 15.4% of the total were published in ACB-E, the most prolific journal reflecting the prevalence of catalytic research in the environmental catalysis. The second-ranked journal is Environmental Science & Technology (EST, 57, 5.0%), which focuses on chemical engineering, environmental engineering, and materials synthesis and processing. The third-ranked one is Catalysis Today (CT 36, 3.2%), whose broad scope is catalytic chemistry. At the same time, contaminant elimination is one of the hot topics related to MnO2 environmental catalysis, with the related journals Environmental Science and Pollution Research (ESPR, 26, 2.3%), and Journal of Hazardous Materials (JHM, 21, 1.9%). In addition, research on MnO2 in the field of environmental catalysis is also closely related to surface and interface reactions, and the related journals include ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (ACS AMI, 18, 1.6%). In general, the core journals are almost related to this topic, specializing in different aspects of MnO2 in the field of environmental catalysis.
Table 1 Top 11 source journals ranked by the quantity of publications, 1991–2021
Rank Source Journal NPa h TCc CPPd IFe
a Number of papers. b h-index. c Total citation. d Citations per paper. e 2021 impact factor.
1 Applied Catalysis B-Environmental 174 274 17[thin space (1/6-em)]869 102.7 24.319
2 Environmental Science & Technology 57 425 5336 93.6 11.357
3 Catalysis Today 36 221 2053 57.0 6.562
4 Chemical Engineering Journal 31 248 1714 55.3 16.744
5 Environmental Science and Pollution Research 26 132 329 12.7 5.19
6 Journal of Hazardous Materials 21 307 975 46.4 14.224
7 Journal of Environmental Sciences 20 109 673 33.7 6.796
8 Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering 19 90 313 16.5 7.968
9 ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 18 255 802 44.6 10.383
10 Science of the Total Environment 18 275 519 28.8 10.753
11 Energy & Environmental Science 17 376 4073 239.6 39.714


3.3 Author contribution and collaboration

3.3.1 Author characteristics. Author contribution analysis is a method for studying collaboration patterns.16 A total of 5107 authors participated in this bibliometric study on MnO2 environmental catalysis. The top 10 authors with the most publications are listed in Table 2, along with their countries and institutions, number of publications, total citations, h-index and total link strength. Zhang P from Tsinghua University published the most articles with the number of 19. The second one is Li J, also from Tsinghua University. Wang S from Curtin University ranks third, publishing 14 articles. Among these authors, seven of the top ten authors are from China. Prof. Zhang P focuses on environmental pollution control chemistry and nanomaterials science, involving the pollution chemistry of water,17 wastewater,18 air and decontamination.19 And Prof. Li J is specialized in the development of automobile exhaust catalysts,20 indoor air pollution purification,21 and flue gas selective catalytic reduction (SCR) technology.20,22
Table 2 Top 10 authors with the most publications in the field of manganese dioxide in environmental catalysis research
Rank Author Country Institution NPa TLSb TCc CPPd h
a Number of papers. b Total link strength. c Total citation. d Citations per paper. e h-index.
1 Zhang P China Tsinghua University 19 41 1755 92.4 52
2 Li J China Tsinghua University 18 44 2464 136.9 74
3 Wang S Australia Curtin University 14 25 2710 193.6 131
4 He H China Chinese Academy of Sciences 12 24 550 45.8 80
5 Ma J China Harbin Institute of Technology 12 24 635 52.9 31
6 Suib, S l USA University of Connecticut 12 12 748 62.3 91
7 Sun H Australia Edith Cowan University 12 22 2161 180.1 90
8 Wang J China Huazhong Normal University 12 22 1098 91.5 24
9 Peng Y China Tsinghua University 9 29 435 48.3 55
10 Rong S China Nanjing University of Science and Technology 9 16 546 60.7 13


The total link strength (TLS) obtained from VOSviewer can effectively reveal the relationship between the number and frequency of co-authors. Each node represents an author, and the size of the node represents the number of co-authored papers. The link between two nodes represents the collaboration between them, and a larger link width means a closer collaboration between authors. Different colors represent different author cooperation clusters. The results in Fig. 2 show several clusters of authors working closely together, such as Zhang P (Tsinghua University), Wang S (Curtin University), Li J (Tsinghua University) and Suib S L (University of Connecticut). However, there is no close connection within different clusters, which indicates that the field is currently relatively independent in terms of international collaboration.


image file: d2va00276k-f2.tif
Fig. 2 Mapping knowledge domains of co-authors.
3.3.2 The most productive and influential institutions. By analyzing organizational collaboration, information about the most influential and productive institutions can be uncovered.12 To further identify the major institutions, the top 10 institutions in terms of the number of publications are listed in Table 3. Among these institutions, the top nine are all from China and the fifth is from the USA. Fig. 3 shows the knowledge domain map of the collaborative institution using VOSviewer, presenting the densest TLS. The Chinese Academy of Sciences, with the most publications and ranking first in TLS, indicted its broader collaboration and higher academic impact. Furthermore, from the results in Fig. 3 the two institutions that work most closely together are Chinese Academy of Sciences and University of Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Table 3 Top 10 institutions with the most publications in the field of manganese dioxide in environmental catalysis research
Rank Institution Country NPa Pb TLSc TCd CPPe
a Number of papers. b Proportion%. c Total link strength. d Total citation. e Citations per paper.
1 Chinese Academy of Sciences China 94 8.3% 86 5725 60.9
2 Tsinghua University China 64 5.6% 49 5659 88.4
3 University of Chinese Academy of Sciences China 32 2.8% 40 1701 53.2
4 Harbin Institute of Technology China 26 2.3% 6 1830 70.4
5 University of Connecticut USA 21 1.9% 11 1416 67.4
6 Wuhan University of Technology China 18 1.6% 17 1079 59.9
7 Dalian University of Technology China 17 1.5% 6 571 33.6
8 Fudan University China 17 1.5% 10 2316 136.2
9 Sun Yat-sen University China 14 1.2% 7 891 63.6
10 University of Science and Technology of China China 14 1.2% 15 882 63.0



image file: d2va00276k-f3.tif
Fig. 3 Mapping knowledge domain of collaborative institutions of MnO2 environmental catalysis.
3.3.3 The most productive and influential countries/territories. In order to analyze the cooperation between the countries/regions involved in the study of this topic, the distribution of countries/regions was analyzed (Fig. 4). The theme study involved up to 72 countries/regions, and the top 5 countries/regions were China, USA, India, South Korea, and Australia, with 630 (55.6%), 193 (17.0%), 59 (5.2%), 51 (4.5%), and 37 (3.3%) publications, respectively. The knowledge domain map of co-authoring countries/regions is shown in Fig. 5. The nodes on the map represent different countries/regions, and their sizes represent the number of publications. The link between two nodes means that they have a cooperative relationship; the denser the link lines, the closer the cooperation between the two countries/regions. In terms of the number of cooperating countries, a total of 35 nodes are linked to China, 26 nodes are linked to the USA, and 16 nodes are linked to India; the higher the number of linked nodes, the more extensive the international cooperation. As can be seen in Fig. 5, China and the USA cooperate most closely, followed by China–Australia and China–Japan.
image file: d2va00276k-f4.tif
Fig. 4 Country/region distribution of the literature.

image file: d2va00276k-f5.tif
Fig. 5 Mapping knowledge domains of co-authoring countries/regions of MnO2 environmental catalysis.

3.4 Co-citation analysis

The word co-citation was first proposed by the American intelligence scientist Henry Small, and it refers to the relationship between two papers when they are simultaneously referenced by a later published paper.23 At the same time, the highly co-cited journals represent the core journals at the forefront of current research. To identify core journals and knowledge bases relevant to this study, co-citation analysis of source journals and publications was performed using the VOSviewer tool.
3.4.1 Journal co-citation analysis. The journal co-citation mapped knowledge domains of MnO2 in the field of catalysis research are shown in Fig. 6. Two different journals are connected by a connecting line, indicating that two articles published in different journals are cited in the same article (later published). The denser the link, the higher the co-citation intensity of the two journals.
image file: d2va00276k-f6.tif
Fig. 6 Mapped knowledge domains for journal co-citation in the field of MnO2 environmental catalysis.

From Fig. 6, ACB-E is the largest node among all journals, indicating that ACB-E is the most cited journal along with other journals. This is not only related to the influence of the journal, but also to the number of articles published in the journal, with ACB-E ranking first among all journals in terms of the number of publications (Table 1). In the green cluster, CT and Journal of Catalysis (JC) are also widely cited, which shows that journals related to environmental catalysis generally have a broader impact. In addition, the connecting lines among ACB-E, JHM and Chemical Engineering Journal (CEJ) are thicker than the other lines, indicating a higher frequency of co-citation among these three journals.

The blue color in Fig. 6 is concentrated in the engineering and technology, with the representative journals of EST and CEJ. In terms of co-citation intensity, EST, JHM and CEJ have a close co-citation relationship with other journals.

The red cluster covers mainly chemical sciences-related journals, including Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS), Angewandte Chemie-International Edition (ACIE) and Chemical Society Reviews (CSR). The node of links in the green cluster is greater than in the other clusters, suggesting that research on MnO2 in environmental catalysis is more widespread.

3.4.2 Literature co-citation analysis. To further investigate the distribution of the most influential papers on MnO2 in the field of environmental catalysis research, the top 20 most cited papers were collected and are listed in Table 4. Fourteen of the top 20 highly cited papers were published after 2010, indicating that the field has developed rapidly in the last decade or so (Fig. 1). As for the subjects, 10 of the 20 papers are related to catalytic oxidation, 4 papers are on SCR, 3 papers are about electrocatalysis and 2 papers are related to advanced oxidation processes (AOPs). In addition, one paper related to the role of MnO2 in the global nitrogen cycle is also worthy of attention.
Table 4 Top 20 publications with the most citations in the field of MnO2 environmental catalysis
Rank Title Journal Author Year Citations IF (2021) Reference
1 Low-temperature selective catalytic reduction of NOx with NH3 over metal oxide and zeolite catalysts-A review Catalysis Today Li et al. 2011 772 6.562 27
2 Activity and selectivity of pure manganese oxides in the selective catalytic reduction of nitric oxide with ammonia Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Kapteijn, et al. 1994 732 24.319 28
3 MnOx–CeO2 mixed oxide catalysts for complete oxidation of formaldehyde: effect of preparation method and calcination temperature Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Tang, et al. 2006 663 24.319 29
4 Manganese oxides with rod-, wire-, tube-, and flower-like morphologies: highly effective catalysts for the removal of toluene Environmental Science & Technology Wang et al. 2012 571 11.357 30
5 Defect-engineered ultrathin delta-MnO2 nanosheet arrays as bifunctional electrodes for efficient overall water splitting Advanced Energy Materials Zhao et al. 2017 568 29.698 34
6 Persulfate activation on crystallographic manganese oxides: mechanism of singlet oxygen evolution for nonradical selective degradation of aqueous contaminants Environmental Science & Technology Zhu et al. 2019 517 11.357 35
7 The role of lattice oxygen on the activity of manganese oxides towards the oxidation of volatile organic compounds Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Santos, et al. 2010 504 24.319 36
8 Surface characterization studies of TiO2 supported manganese oxide catalysts for low temperature SCR of NO with NH3 Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Ettireddy, et al. 2007 470 24.319 37
9 Gas phase ozone decomposition catalysts Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Dhandapani, et al. 1997 464 24.319 38
10 In situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy investigation of a bifunctional manganese oxide catalyst with high activity for electrochemical water oxidation and oxygen reduction Journal of the American Chemical Society Gorlin, et al. 2013 417 16.383 39
11 Different crystallographic one-dimensional MnO2 nanomaterials and their superior performance in catalytic phenol degradation Environmental Science & Technology Saputra, et al. 2013 363 11.357 31
12 Electrosynthesis, functional, and structural characterization of a water-oxidizing manganese oxide Energy & Environmental Science Zaharieva, et al. 2012 362 39.714 40
13 Removal of volatile organic compounds by single-stage and two-stage plasma catalysis systems: a review of the performance enhancement mechanisms, current status, and suitable applications Environmental Science & Technology Chen et al. 2009 350 11.357 41
14 Co-doping a metal (Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Ce, and Zr) on Mn/TiO2 catalyst and its effect on the selective reduction of NO with NH3 at low-temperatures Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Thirupathi, et al. 2011 345 24.319 42
15 Manganese oxides at different oxidation states for heterogeneous activation of peroxymonosulfate for phenol degradation in aqueous solutions Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Saputra, et al. 2013 339 24.319 43
16 Interactions of manganese with the nitrogen cycle: alternative pathways to dinitrogen Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta Luther, et al. 1997 302 5.921 44
17 3D-hierarchically structured MnO2 for catalytic oxidation of phenol solutions by activation of peroxymonosulfate: structure dependence and mechanism Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Wang et al. 2015 300 24.319 45
18 Catalytic decomposition of gaseous ozone over manganese dioxides with different crystal structures Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Jia et al. 2016 299 24.319 46
19 The effect of manganese vacancy in birnessite-type MnO2 on room-temperature oxidation of formaldehyde in air Applied Catalysis B: Environmental Wang et al. 2017 294 24.319 47
20 The role of lattice oxygen on the activity of manganese oxides towards the oxidation of volatile organic compounds Applied Catalysis B-Environmental Santos, et al. 2010 443 24.319 36


The most cited paper is “Low-temperature selective catalytic reduction of NOx with NH3 over metal oxide and zeolite catalysts-A review” written by Li et al., with 772 citations. This study reviews two types of the low-temperature catalyst (LTC), the metal oxide catalyst and metal exchanged zeolite catalyst. For industrial flue gas and exhaust gas of diesel engines, it is of great significance to develop LTC for selective catalytic reduction of NOx with ammonia (NH3-SCR). At present, V2O5,24 Fe2O3 (ref. 25) and MnOx (ref. 26) are mainly used as active components in LTC research. Among them, MnOx are the most active components for NH3-SCR of NO at low temperatures. MnO2 exhibited the best catalytic activity in the temperature range of 100–300 °C, but its low N2 selectivity required further improvement. In addition, efforts need to be made on detailed mechanisms of SO2 poisoning and H2O suppression effect on Mn based metal oxides at low temperatures. At the same time, the synergistic effect of composite oxides is also a hot topic in recent years.27

Part of the research in the above review has been documented in a paper published in 1994 titled “Activity and selectivity of pure manganese oxides in the selective catalytic reduction of nitric oxide with ammonia”, which was the second highly cited article. This study reported that manganese oxides with different crystallinity, oxidation state and specific surface area were used in NH3-SCR. The highest SCR activity per unit surface area is exhibited by MnO2, followed by Mn5O8, Mn2O3, Mn3O4 and MnO, in that order. The temperature-programmed reduction (TPR) experiments indicate a relation between the SCR process and surface reactive oxygen species.28

The third highly cited paper focuses on catalytic oxidation. The complete oxidation of formaldehyde by MnOx–CeO2 mixed oxides prepared by sol–gel, co-precipitation and modified coprecipitation method is reported.29 It is worth noting that half of the number of the top 20 highly cited articles are on catalytic oxidation, which fully illustrates that catalytic oxidation is a hot area of current research in the complete oxidation of formaldehyde,29 toluene elimination,30 phenol degradation,31etc. Due to the advantages of high catalytic activity, strong stability and low cost, the non-noble metal catalyst MnO2 has been widely used in Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) elimination. In order to improve its catalytic activity, researchers are now using doping modification and structural modulation to compensate for its weak electron transfer ability and low specific surface area.32 Although a large number of reports have been conducted for catalytic oxidation of VOCs, there are still some specific areas that need our further attention for the development of industry and the need of environmental protection, for example, the removal of halogenated VOCs and nitrogen-containing VOCs, and the combination of experimental and theoretical calculations to gain insight into the kinetics and mechanism of the catalytic oxidation reaction of VOCs on MnO2 surfaces. In addition, how to improve the hydrothermal stability of catalysts in industrial applications is also a focus of future research.

As can be seen in Table 4, MnO2 has also attracted great attention in the electrocatalytic technology due to its excellent hydrogen/oxygen evolution reaction performance. In addition, hydrogen energy is regarded as a green, efficient and renewable new source with the most potential to replace fossil fuels,33 so MnO2 catalytic HER technology might be promising to solve the energy crisis. In order to further enhance the electrocatalytic properties of MnO2, researchers have made many useful explorations, such as doping,48 construction of defective vacancies49 and compounding with other active nanomaterials.50

3.5 Keyword co-occurrence analysis

The objective of keyword co-occurrence analysis is to study the core content and structure of a specific field and thus to reveal the research frontiers in that field. A total of up to 5330 keywords were extracted from the Web of Science core database for the analysis of MnO2 environmental catalysis. We selected keywords with a frequency of 22 or more occurrences for visual analysis and obtained a total of 83 keywords, and the results in Fig. 7 show that a total of 4 clusters were obtained, where a node represents a keyword, and the node size represents the frequency of the keyword's occurrence, and the density of the connecting line between the nodes represents the strength of the co-occurrence between the keywords.
image file: d2va00276k-f7.tif
Fig. 7 Keyword co-occurrence knowledge domain map of manganese dioxide in the field of environmental catalytic research.

Cluster 1 (Blue): the most frequent keyword in the blue cluster is “MnO2”, which is connected to 82 nodes out of 83 nodes in total in Fig. 7. The blue cluster mainly spreads out around the nodes of “Catalytic Oxidation”, “Low-Temperature” and “VOCs”. VOCs, such as toluene and formaldehyde, are of widespread concern as a major cause of global air pollution.51 Low-temperature catalytic oxidation technology can convert VOCs into CO2 and water, which is recognized as one of the blue, efficient and environmentally friendly treatment means.52 MnO2 has inherent advantages, such as multiple valence states (Mn2+, Mn3+, and Mn4+) and crystal structures (α-MnO2, β-MnO2, γ-MnO2, and δ-MnO2). Moreover, MnO2 is excellent in the significant adsorption of oxygen and low-temperature self-reduction;30 especially, α-MnO2 with a [2 × 2] tunnel structure is considered as one of the ideal catalysts for VOC removal.53

Cluster 2 (Red): among the 83 keywords, “Performance” is well correlated with “MnO2” and is also the largest node in the red cluster. This cluster focuses on the preparation of catalyst materials and their catalytic performance. Zeng et al.54 reviewed the progress of catalytic oxidation of formaldehyde based on materials prepared by different methods, such as MnO2 loaded noble metals, structural regulation of MnO2, and MnO2 and composites of MnO2 with other non-noble metal materials. The influence of material synthesis methods on the catalytic performance was revealed. In addition, the regulation of interfacial structure is also one of the research hotspots for catalytic activity. Duan et al.55 prepared a bi-component MnO2 and Mn3O4 supported Pt catalyst by interfacial modulation in the in situ liquid-phase reduction strategy, which showed excellent catalytic activity for toluene oxidation and could achieve complete mineralization of toluene at 160 °C. This report reveals that the modulation of the interfacial structure in the bi-component manganese oxide supported Pt catalysts is a feasible way to improve the catalytic oxidation performance of toluene.

Cluster 3 (Yellow): the largest node is “Degradation”, with 72 nodes connected, including “Oxidation”, “Waste water”, “Removal”, etc., within cluster 3. This cluster mainly reflects the subject of heterogeneous catalysis. He et al.56 investigated the structure–activity relationship of MnO2 and the mechanism of catalytic ozone oxidation in “Aqueous Solution”. Gan et al.57 prepared β-MnO2/kenaf carbon fiber (KCF) composites for the degradation of “Bisphenol-A” (BPA) in water via catalytic oxidation.

Cluster 4 (Green): the largest node is “Density Functional Theory” (DFT), with 48 nodes linked, which indicates that the use of computer simulation techniques to study the catalytic mechanism is becoming an auxiliary research tool. Zhou et al.48 synthesized nano-hybridized MnO2 catalysts via α-MnO2 nanotubes, and DFT calculations showed that the surface of pristine α-MnO2 (111) could promote the adsorption and activation of O2, while the surface of hybridized MnO2 (111) contributed to the absorption/decomposition of the product H2O.

3.6 Research frontier identification

The timeline view can clearly reflect the results of the different clusters over time.12 The X-axis is the year of publication and the Y-axis represents the different keyword clusters. Fig. 8 shows the entire timeline of MnO2 environmental catalysis from 2011 to 2021. A keyword represents a node, i.e., the larger node represents the stronger keyword burst, that is to say, the connection between keywords indicates a co-occurrence relationship between each other.16 A total of eight clusters were obtained with the evolution of representative keywords under each cluster (Fig. 8).
image file: d2va00276k-f8.tif
Fig. 8 Keyword timeline view of MnO2 in the field of environmental catalysis.

From 2011, many keywords appeared in the timeline, including manganese dioxide, hydrogen evolution reaction, and low-temperature NH3-SCR. By 2015, the keywords, such as catalytic oxidation, low temperature, CO2 selectivity, and noble metal, appeared. In 2020, the keywords, such as density functional theory and water treatment, appeared. In 2021, structure–activity relationship, DFT calculation, and manganese defect as the three key words emerged.

The top 15 keywords in terms of citation burst strength obtained by CiteSpace software are shown in Table 5. It can be seen that the keyword with the highest citation burst strength is density functional theory. From 2019 to 2021 there were strong citation bursts for the three keywords, i.e., structure–activity relationship, density functional theory and water treatment. Based on the strong citation bursts and the impact of keywords, it can be predicted that overall water splitting, density functional theory, and water treatment will remain research hot words for MnO2 environmental catalysis in the future. As shown in Fig. 8, the emerging keywords in 2021, such as DFT calculation and structure–activity relationship, might represent that themes, such as performance, catalytic oxidation and mechanism, are also the research frontier in the field of MnO2 environmental catalysis (Fig. 7). As is known, the morphology has a crucial influence on the catalytic performance of MnO2.30,58–61

Table 5 Top 15 keywords with the strongest citation bursts of MnO2 in the field of environmental catalysis
No Keywords Strength Begin End 2011–2021
1 Density functional theory 5.86 2020 2021 image file: d2va00276k-u1.tif
2 Water treatment 4.87 2020 2021 image file: d2va00276k-u2.tif
3 Elemental mercury 4.27 2016 2017 image file: d2va00276k-u3.tif
4 Synthetic humic-like acid 3.48 2018 2018 image file: d2va00276k-u4.tif
5 Carbon nanotube 3.48 2018 2018 image file: d2va00276k-u5.tif
6 Organic dye 3.48 2018 2018 image file: d2va00276k-u6.tif
7 Surface property 3.22 2012 2015 image file: d2va00276k-u7.tif
8 MnO2 nanoparticle 2.71 2017 2017 image file: d2va00276k-u8.tif
9 Structure–activity relationship 2.71 2019 2019 image file: d2va00276k-u9.tif
10 Inorganic compound 2.68 2015 2015 image file: d2va00276k-u10.tif
11 Low temperature 2.68 2015 2015 image file: d2va00276k-u11.tif
12 Electron microscopy 2.68 2015 2015 image file: d2va00276k-u12.tif
13 Noble metal 2.68 2015 2015 image file: d2va00276k-u13.tif
14 Copper oxide 2.65 2016 2016 image file: d2va00276k-u14.tif
15 Methyl orange 2.65 2016 2016 image file: d2va00276k-u15.tif


4. Conclusion

A bibliometric analysis of published papers related to MnO2 environmental catalysis in the WOS core database is conducted to obtain a knowledge map through information visualization analysis. To date, MnO2 environmental catalysis research shows the following characteristics:

(1) MnO2 environmental catalysis research can be divided into three stages: the initial stage (1991–1999), the primary growth stage (2000–2008), and the rapid development stage (2009–2021). China is the most active country in this field, and the disciplinary categories indicate that MnO2 environmental catalysis is a multidisciplinary field based on catalytic chemistry, environmental chemistry, engineering and materials, and energy chemistry. Relevant institutions and authors in China, the USA, India, South Korea, and Australia are the main driving forces of MnO2 environmental catalysis research. However, from the analysis of author cooperation, the current national cooperation of this field is relatively independent, and global cooperation should be further strengthened.

(2) In terms of co-citation, ACB-E, EST, and JACS have a close co-citation relationship with other journals, which is mainly determined by the annual publication papers and the influence of the journal. According to the literature co-citation analysis, electrocatalysis, catalytic oxidation, AOPs, and SCR are the research spots. In addition, the keyword analysis points out that catalytic oxidation, materials and performance, waste water degradation, mechanism and DFT research themes can also be worthy of attention.

(3) By analyzing the research frontiers, 8 categories are classified, including environmental catalysis, manganese dioxide, catalytic oxidation, catalytic ozonation, heterogeneous catalyst, electrocatalysis, advanced oxidation processes, and mechanism. The themes of structure–activity relationship, density functional theory, catalytic oxidation, and mechanism are also the research frontier in the field of MnO2 environmental catalysis research.

Author contributions

Yaoguang Guo: investigation, writing original draft, and funding acquisition. Qianqian Chen: investigation, visualization, and writing original draft. Xiaohu Sun: methodology, and investigation. Yujing Liu: methodology, and investigation. Jie Guan: resources, funding acquisition and supervision. Xiaojiao Zhang: software. Nuo Liu: methodology, and investigation. Xiaoyi Lou: writing – review & editing, and supervision. Yingshun Li: methodology. Xiangwen Zhang: editing and supervision.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts to declare.

Acknowledgements

The present work was financially supported by Shanghai Natural Science Foundation (20ZR1421100), Natural Science Foundation of China (52070127, and 52270129), and the Central-Public interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Fund (2019T14). Dr Guo also thanks the financial support of Science and Technology Development Fund of Pudong New Area (PKJ2021-C01, and PKJ2022-C07).

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