Abstract

Typical p-type semiconductor MnO codoped with n-type semiconductors such as CeO2 and V2O5 was reported to achieve high efficiency in catalytic NO removal by NH3. In this paper, we present novel Mn-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst which exhibited an excellent NO conversion efficiency of 90% at 140°C. By using this codoped catalyst, the best low-temperature activity was greatly decreased when compared with single Mn- or Ce-doped catalyst. According to the characterization results from BET, XRD, and XPS, the codoped catalyst was composed of both CeO2 and amorphous Mn. The electron circulation formed between doping elements is believed to promote the electron transfer, which may be one of the reasons for excellent low-temperature denitration performance.

1. Introduction

NO is mainly derived from industrial emissions, traffic emissions, and living emissions. NO gases react to form smog and acid rain as well as being central to the formation of tropospheric ozone. It especially can form small solid particles through the secondary chemical reactions that cause serious pollutions to the environment. Therefore, it is necessary to take a denitration treatment for flue gas after combustion. Selective catalytic reduction is the most widely used and effective methods for the removal of NO in industrial at present. The main two reactions are presented in the following:

NH3 and NO almost do not react in the absence of the catalyst; therefore, the catalyst is the key for the whole reaction. V2O5/TiO2 and V2O5-WO3/TiO2 (anatase) catalysts operated at 350–400°C, with less than 1% V2O5 loading, have been widely accepted as commercial catalysts [13]. Currently, other doped companions such as Mn, Cu, Fe, Ce, Wo, and F [48] and morphological changes in the supports can be used to modify the catalyst to achieve high catalytic activity [912]. W or Mo doped V2O5/TiO2, considered as the most effective commercial catalyst, is widely used for denitration in power plants and nitric acid plants [13, 14]. However, its narrow activity temperature window forces the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) unit to be installed upstream of the desulfurizer and electrostatic precipitator where high concentrations of SO2 and particle matters can make the catalyst bed layer blocked, accelerating the deactivation of the catalyst [15]. Therefore, there is a rising interest in high performance catalysts that can be used at low temperature. MnO has attracted significant attention because of its various types of labile oxygen species [16, 17]. Recently, Ce-doped catalyst has been found to reduce the reaction temperature significantly and has high catalytic activity and selectivity [18]. Mn-doped catalyst has shown excellent low-temperature activity, lower apparent active energy, and better ion dispersion than those of most previously reported SCR catalysts [17, 19]. This research committed to the development of low-temperature catalyst based on the V2O5/TiO2 and V2O5-CeO2/TiO2 catalyst, which is the key of the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) to remove NO from effluent gas.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Materials

The low-temperature catalysts in the experiments were prepared with commercial anatase TiO2 (Tianjin Guangfu Pharmaceutical) as carriers, with a specific surface area of 7.03 m2/g. Ammonium metavanadate (NH4VO3) was used as the precursor of vanadium, cerium nitrate (Ce(NO3)3·6H2O) as the precursor of cerium, and oxalic acid solution as the precursor impregnation solution in the doping process. Manganese acetate (C4H6MnO4.4H2O), copper nitrate (Cu(NO3)2.3H2O), cobalt nitrate (Co(NO3)2.6H2O), ferric nitrate (Fe(NO3)3.9H2O), and chromium nitrate (Cr(NO3)3.9H2O) were selected to provide Mn, Cu, Co, Fe, and Cr, respectively. All these salts precursors were purchased from Tianjin Guangfu Technology Development Co., Ltd. and Aladdin Technology Co., Ltd.

2.2. Catalyst Preparation

The catalysts with different loadings of vanadium and cerium in the experiment were prepared by a conventional incipient-wetness impregnation method. Firstly, the oxalic acid was dissolved in deionized water and heated to dissolve completely, used as the precursor impregnation solution. Then, a certain quality of ammonium metavanadate was added to the oxalic acid solution and stirred until dissolved completely. A quantitative powder of cerium nitrate was added in the same way, finally, adding the TiO2 powder to the above solution, stirring, and impregnating for 1 hour. The water was evaporated from the solution by a rotary evaporator and dried at 80°C for 24 hours. The dried samples were calcined at 500°C under the air atmosphere for 2 hours. Then the catalysts were ground and sieved to 20–40 mesh for catalytic performance evaluation. Other metals like Mn, Fe, Cr, etc. were doped in the same way as described above. Eventually, Ce-V2O5/TiO2 catalyst with a fixed amount of 5% (wt%) V2O5 but different Ce loadings of 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, and 30% (wt%) and other Bimetallic-doped V2O5/TiO2 catalysts were prepared by the same impregnation method [2022]. The catalysts prepared are denoted as M-Ce-5V2O5/TiO2. M represents the second metal, such as Mn, Fe, or Cu; and represent the loading of M (wt%) and Ce (wt%), respectively.

2.3. Catalytic Activity Test

The SCR activity measurement was performed on a fixed-bed stainless steel tube reactor with an inner diameter of 11 mm and the outer diameter of 14 mm. Laboratory gas distribution was used to simulate the flue gas in the measurement. The feed gas mixture consisted of NH3 500 ppm, NO 500 ppm, 3% O2 (volume fraction), and N2 as the balance gas. The total flow rate was 1000 mL/min controlled by mass flow meters and the GHSV = 10,000 h−1 in each reaction. The concentrations of NO were measured at the inlet and outlet by flue gas analyzer to calculate the conversion rate by the following:where [NO] = [NO] + [NO2] and the in and out indicated the inlet and outlet concentration at steady state, respectively. The data was measured when the reaction reached the steady state (about 20–40 min) at each temperature, which could reduce the errors caused by instability.

2.4. Catalyst Characterization

The powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements of the samples were recorded on a Bruker D8-Advance X-ray powder diffractometer using Cu K radiation ( Å) with scattering angles () of 5–85° and a 0.0197 step size. The specific surface areas and pore size were measured by nitrogen adsorption at −196°C by the BET method using Micromeritics ASAP 2020 M surface areas and porosity analyzer. The samples were degassed at 200°C for 12 hours. The X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) experiments were carried out on a Thermo Fisher Escalab 250Xi X-ray photoelectron spectrometer system equipped with a monochromatic Al K X-ray source scanning from 0 to 5000 eV.

3. Results

3.1. Ce-Doped Effect of V2O5-TiO2 Catalysts

NO conversions rate at various temperatures for the NH3-SCR over Ce-doped V2O5/TiO2 catalysts is shown in Figure 1. V2O5/TiO2 shows above 80% NO conversion rate at a wide temperature range of 175°C to 375°C. The Ce doping can improve the catalytic activity effectively, especially from 160 to 450°C, due to the enhancement of electron transfer rate in catalyst. The 30Ce-V2O5/TiO2 shows the highest NO conversion and widest temperature window with NO conversion above 90% from 160 to 400°C and the conversion rate could reach 99.83% at 200°C.

The catalytic activity with various Ce contents is shown in Figure 2. With the increase of Ce doping amount, the NO conversion firstly decreased and then increased at low-temperature zone (100–200°C) and high-temperature zone (350–450°C). 10Ce-5V2O5/TiO2 shows the worst catalytic activity, the NO conversion even lower than the undoped 5V2O5/TiO2 catalyst.

3.2. Low-Temperature Activity of X-Ce Codoped V2O5-TiO2 Catalysts

Bimetal doped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst was prepared on the basis of single Ce-doped catalyst. The Ce loadings were selected as 30 wt% based on the previous results and the cometal (Mn, Fe, Co, Cu, and Cr) loadings were varied ranging from 10 to 30 wt%. The catalytic activity was tested on the fixed-bed reactor at different temperatures, and the results are shown in Figures 3 and 4. From the results we can observe that the catalytic effect of Fe-Ce codoped catalyst is slightly lower than single Ce-doped catalyst at the low-temperature zone. The Cu-Ce codoped catalyst shows the worst activity, even less than the based V2O5/TiO2 catalyst. Co-Ce and Cr-Ce codoped catalyst can improve the catalytic activity at the low-temperature zone but drop rapidly at high-temperatures zone. With a narrower active temperature window that cannot keep higher catalytic efficiency in a certain temperature range, Mn-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst can improve the activity at low temperature effectively. It shows the best catalytic effect at low temperatures; the NO conversion can reach 95.69% at 140°C. The 20Mn-30Ce-V2O5/TiO2 catalyst is the best as the effect of 20Mn-30Ce-V2O5/TiO2 and 30Mn-30Ce-V2O5/TiO2 is almost similar.

The NO conversion over X-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalysts with loading contents of 20% at 160°C is shown in Figure 5. 20Mn-30Ce-V2O5/TiO2 catalyst shows the best activity that the conversion rate can reach 99.58% which is nearly 30% higher than singer Ce-doped. The catalytic activity over X-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalysts is in the order of Mn-Ce > Co-Ce > Cr-Ce > Ce > Fe-Ce > Cu-Ce codoped.

3.3. Mn-Ce Codoped Effect

Initially, the single Mn- and Ce-doped V2O5/TiO2 catalysts are prepared by the impregnation method to investigate the effect of single Mn or Ce, as compared to the Mn-Ce codoped catalyst. The result is shown in Figure 6. The NO conversion over Mn-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst can reach more than 90% at 140°C, which is much higher than single doped catalyst. Mn-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalysts have the best low-temperature activity that can drop to 80°C which is lower than Mn-doped catalyst and Ce-doped catalyst. However, the catalytic activity is difficult to maintain at high temperature. Single Ce-doped catalyst has the widest temperature window, but the low-temperature effect is not obvious. Mn-doped catalyst has neither good low-temperature activity nor wide temperature window. Relevant characterizations have been taken to the three kinds of catalysts in this experiment.

3.4. XRD

The X-ray powder diffraction patterns of the Mn-Ce codoped and single Ce- and Mn-doped V2O5/TiO2 catalysts are shown in Figure 7. All the reflections provide typical diffraction patterns for the TiO2 anatase phase. The characteristic peaks of Ce and Mn oxides appear, respectively, in single Ce- and Mn-doped catalyst. In the pattern of 30Ce-V2O5/TiO2, the doped Ce exists mainly in the form of CeO2 and part of CeVO4. It was found that CeO2 can effectively improve the catalytic activity and make the reaction temperature window wider [18]. However, the formation of CeVO4 has a certain suppression to the improvement of catalytic activity [23]. A variety of diffraction peaks of Mn oxides appeared in the single Mn-doped catalyst, including Mn2O3, Mn3O4, and MnO2. With the codoping of Mn-Ce, the diffraction peaks of TiO2 become weak significantly and CeO2 crystal phase appears, but much weaker than single Ce-doped catalyst. The XRD results show that Mn, Ce, and TiO2 have displayed a mutual influence by the codoping of Mn-Ce. The incorporation of Mn makes Ce exist in the form of CeO2, but Mn is mostly in the amorphous state which can achieve a better low-temperature effect.

3.5. BET

The results of BET surface area, pore volume, and average pore diameter of each catalyst are shown in Table 1. Ce has a large particle diameter that the incorporation of Ce can improve the BET surface area effectively which is nearly five times more than original V2O5-TiO2. Only a slight increase of the BET surface area has been achieved by the incorporation of Mn. But Mn-Ce codoped catalyst has the maximum surface area and minimum pore size. The change of BET surface area is consistent with the catalytic performance evaluation results in Figure 6.

3.6. XPS

The XPS spectra of Ce 3d of Mn-Ce codoped and single Ce-doped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst are shown in Figure 8. The spectrum of Ce 3d contains eight peaks, in which , , , , , and are the characteristic peaks of Ce4+ and and are the characteristic peaks of Ce3+. According to the intensity of the peak, Ce mainly exists as Ce4+ in both Mn-Ce codoped and single Ce-doped catalyst. The incorporation of Mn impacts the surface valence distribution of Ce that the Ce4+ increases significantly and Ce3+ reduces accordingly. The relative surface concentration of Ce4+ and Ce3+ calculated by the peak area is shown in Figure 9. The ratio of Ce4+/(Ce3+ + Ce4+) increased from 85% to 88.87% for Ce-V2O5/TiO2 and Mn-doped Ce-V2O5/TiO2 catalysts, respectively. These results suggest that the incorporation of Mn can convert part of the Ce3+ Ce4+ and increase the proportion of Ce4+.

The XPS spectra of Mn 2p of Mn-Ce codoped and single Mn-doped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst are shown in Figure 10. Mn 2p has two main peaks, Mn 2p1/2 (near 654 eV) and Mn 2p3/2 (near 642 eV), respectively. The characteristic peak of Mn 2p3/2 is superimposed from four peaks of Mn with different valence. Divide the characteristic peak into four subpeaks that Mn2+ (641.2–641.5 eV), Mn3+ (642.3–642.5 eV), Mn4+ (643.5–643.8 eV), and (645.8–646.0 eV) can be achieved. The relative surface concentration of Mn2+, Mn3+, and Mn4+ calculated by the peak area is shown in Figure 11. Mn mostly exists in the form of Mn2+ in both Mn-Ce codoped and single Mn-doped catalyst. The higher the valence, the lower the atomic concentration. Under the interaction in Mn-Ce codoped system, a small part of the low-valence Mn2+ is oxidized to Mn3+. The incorporation of Mn can react with Ce which has a variable valence that can promote the electron transfer between active components. Some chemical reactions may occur between the Mn2+ and Ce4+ as the following:

The XPS spectra of V 2p of Mn-Ce codoped and single Ce- and Mn-doped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst are shown in Figure 12. The characteristic peak of V2p3/2 appears within 515~518 eV, which can be divided into two peaks, V4+ (516.7 eV) and V5+ (517.6 eV). The relative surface concentration of V4+ and V5+ calculated by the peak area is shown in Figure 13. The concentration of V5+ in a descending order of Mn-Ce codoped > Ce-doped> Mn-doped. V5+ is the active center of the denitration catalyst and NO and NH3 can easily adsorb on the V5+ centers that promote the oxidation and reduction of NO. Under the coeffect of Mn and Ce, a lot of V4+ convert into more active V5+; the concentration of V5+ increased more than 30%.

The XPS results show that the Mn-Ce codoped catalysts promote the interaction among Mn, Ce, and V. The three kinds of atoms are moving to higher valence direction, which is benefical for elcetron transformation and oxidation ability of the whole catalytic system. This is more conducive to the NOx reduced by HN3 at low temperatures.

4. Conclusions

Typical p-type semiconductor MnO codoped with n-type semiconductors such as CeO2 and V2O5 achieved the excellent effect on NO removal by NH3. Mn-Ce codoped vanadium-titanium catalyst system can effectively lower the reaction temperature and improve the efficiency. The NO conversion over Mn-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst can reach more than 90% at 140°C that is much higher than single doped catalyst. Mn-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst has the best low-temperature activity that can drop to 80°C which is lower than single Mn-doped catalyst and Ce-doped catalyst. The codoping of Mn-Ce makes Ce exist in the form of CeO2, but Mn is mostly in amorphous state on the surface which can achieve better low-temperature effect. The incorporation of Mn can react with Ce which has a variable valence that can promote the electron transfer between the two active components to form an effective electron circulation in the presence of oxygen. The Mn, Ce, and V are moving to higher valence direction that the oxidation increased, which is more conducive to the reduced by NH3. Thus even at low temperatures, it is possible to release O radical in the process of NO adsorption, which can be oxidized to NO2 and then react with NH3. All in all, Mn-Ce codoped V2O5/TiO2 catalyst utilizes the electron transfer between Mn, Ce, and V effectively, and the denitration performance at low temperature is greatly improved. This finding may help scientists and engineers to development next generation smart surfaces [24, 25] with absorption functionality.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Authors’ Contributions

Quan Xu, Peng Pu, and Li Cao conceived and designed the experiments; Ke Yang and Weiwei Xiao performed the experiments; Jiaojiao Bai, Li Cao, Yan Luo, and Hao Guo analyzed the data; Wei Cai contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools; Peng Pu and Quan Xu wrote the paper.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Beijing Municipal Science and Technology Project (nos. Z161100001316010 and D141100002814001), National Key Research and Development Plan (no. 2016YFC0303701), Tribology Science Fund of State Key Laboratory of Tribology (no. SKLTKF16A06), and Science Foundation of China University of Petroleum (nos. 2462014YJRC011, ZX20160056, and 201603) for the support.