| Literature DB >> 31382459 |
A B Dongil1,2.
Abstract
This short <span class="Chemical">ren>view aims at providing an overview of the most <span class="Chemical">recent literatu<span class="Chemical">re regarding transition metal nitrides (TMN) applied in heterogeneous catalysis. These materials have received renewed attention in the last decade due to its potential to substitute noble metals mainly in biomass and energy transformations, the decomposition of ammonia being one of the most studied reactions. The reactions considered in this review are limited to thermal catalysis. However the potential of these materials spreads to other key applications as photo- and electrocatalysis in hydrogen and oxygen evolution reactions. Mono, binary and exceptionally ternary metal nitrides have been synthetized and evaluated as catalysts and, in some cases, promoters are added to the structure in an attempt to improve their catalytic performance. The objective of the latest research is finding new synthesis methods that allow to obtain smaller metal nanoparticles and increase the surface area to improve their activity, selectivity and stability under reaction conditions. After a brief introduction and description of the most employed synthetic methods, the review has been divided in the application of transition metal nitrides in the following reactions: hydrotreatment, oxidation and ammonia synthesis and decomposition.Entities:
Keywords: heterogeneous catalysis; transition metal nitrides
Year: 2019 PMID: 31382459 PMCID: PMC6722748 DOI: 10.3390/nano9081111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1Value of the nitrogen chemical potential (μN) where the nitrogen covered surface becomes more stable than the clean metal surface; Reproduced from [18], with permission from American Chemical Society, 2018.
Figure 2(a) bcc: TiN, ZrN, HfN, VN, CrN; (b) hcp: Mo2N, W2N; (c) fcc: MoN, TaN. Blue points represent transition metal atoms and brown points nitrogen atoms. Adapted from [6], with permission from Wiley, 2013.
Figure 3Plausible CO hydrogenation reaction pathways on Mo2N and K-Mo2N catalysts. Reproduced from [25] with permission from Elsevier, 2018.
Figure 4Reproduced from [32], with permission from Royal Society of Chemistry, 2011.
Figure 5CoNC/CNT active sites on nitro compounds hydrogenation and hydrogenated coupling of nitrobenzene with benzaldehyde. Reproduced from [41], with permission from Royal Society of Chemistry, 2016.
Figure 6Synthesis of Pt-Mo2N-SAB-15. Reproduced from [45], with permission from American Chemical Society, 2016.
Figure 7Reproduced from [45], with permission from American Chemical Society, 2016.
Figure 8H2 adsorption sites on Mo2N (111) and (100) faces. Reproduced from [48], with permission from American Chemical Society, 2016.
Figure 9Catalytic conversion mechanism of PNP into PAP over the Pd–Mo2N/SBA-15 hybrids in the presence of NaBH4. Reproduced from [53], with permission from American Chemical Society, 2018.
Figure 10Reproduced from [9], with permission from American Chemical Society, 2017.