Tuning the Electronic Structures of Anchor Sites to Achieve Zero‐Valence Single‐Atom Catalysts for Advanced Hydrogenation

Author:

Li Yin1,Xu Yuxing1,Chen Si1,Shi Xianxian1,Gu Qingqing2,Wang Leilei1,Gu Minghui1,Teng Botao3,Yang Bing2,Lu Junling1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Precision and Intelligent Chemistry School of Chemistry and Materials Science Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemistry for Energy Materials (iChEM) University of Science and Technology of China Hefei 230026 China

2. CAS Key Laboratory of Science and Technology on Applied Catalysis Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics Chinese Academy of Sciences Dalian, Liaoning 116023 China

3. Tianjin Key Laboratory of Brine Chemical Engineering and Resource Eco-utilization College of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science Tianjin University of Science and Technology Tianjin 300457 China

Abstract

AbstractSingle‐atom catalysts (SACs) have recently become highly attractive for selective hydrogenation reactions owing to their remarkably high selectivity. However, compared to their nanoparticle counterparts, atomically dispersed metal atoms in SACs often show inferior activity and are prone to aggregate under reaction conditions. Here, by theoretical calculations, we show that tuning the local electronic structures of metal anchor sites on g‐C3N4 by doping B atoms (BCN) with relatively lower electronegativity allows achieving zero‐valence Pd SACs with reinforced metal‐support orbital hybridizations for high stability and upshifted Pd 4d orbitals for high activity in H2 activation. The precise synthesis of Pd SACs on BCN supports with varied B contents substantiated the theoretical prediction. A zero‐valence Pd1/BCN SAC was achieved on a BCN support with a relatively low B content. It exhibited much higher stability in a H2 reducing environment, and more strikingly, a hydrogenation activity, approximately 10 and 34 times greater than those high‐valence Pd1/g‐C3N4 and Pd1/BCN with a high B content, respectively.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Publisher

Wiley

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