Ag Alloyed Pd Single-Atom Catalysts for Efficient Selective Hydrogenation of Acetylene to Ethylene in Excess Ethylene

Guang Xian Pei(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiao Yan Liu(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Aiqin Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Adam F. Lee(Aston University), Mark A. Isaacs(Aston University), Li Lin(Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemistry for Energy Materials), Xiaoli Pan(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaofeng Yang(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Xiaodong Wang(Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemistry for Energy Materials), Zhijun Tai(Aston University), Karen Wilson(Aston University), Tao Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
ACS Catalysis
May 5, 2015
Cited by 675Open Access

Abstract

Semihydrogenation of acetylene in an ethylene-rich stream is an industrially important process. Conventional supported monometallic Pd catalysts offer high acetylene conversion, but they suffer from very low selectivity to ethylene due to overhydrogenation and the formation of carbonaceous deposits. Herein, a series of Ag alloyed Pd single-atom catalysts, possessing only ppm levels of Pd, supported on silica gel were prepared by a simple incipient wetness coimpregnation method and applied to the selective hydrogenation of acetylene in an ethylene-rich stream under conditions close to the front-end employed by industry. High acetylene conversion and simultaneous selectivity to ethylene was attained over a wide temperature window, surpassing an analogous Au alloyed Pd single-atom system we previously reported. Restructuring of AgPd nanoparticles and electron transfer from Ag to Pd were evidenced by in situ FTIR and in situ XPS as a function of increasing reduction temperature. Microcalorimetry and XANES measurements support both geometric and electronic synergetic effects between the alloyed Pd and Ag. Kinetic studies provide valuable insight into the nature of the active sites within these AgPd/SiO2 catalysts, and hence, they provide evidence for the key factors underpinning the excellent performance of these bimetallic catalysts toward the selective hydrogenation of acetylene under ethylene-rich conditions while minimizing precious metal usage.


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