The conventional V2O5-WO3/TiO2 catalyst suffers severely from arsenic poisoning, leading to a significant loss of catalytic activity. The doping of Al or Mo plays an important role in promoting the… Click to show full abstract
The conventional V2O5-WO3/TiO2 catalyst suffers severely from arsenic poisoning, leading to a significant loss of catalytic activity. The doping of Al or Mo plays an important role in promoting the arsenic resistance on NH3 selective catalytic reduction (NH3-SCR), but their promotion mechanism remains in debate and has yet to be explored in multipollutant control (MPC) of NOx and chlorinated organics. Herein, our experimental characterizations and density functional theory (DFT) calculations confirmed that arsenic species preferentially adsorb on both Al and Mo to form arsenate, thereby avoiding bonding to the catalytically active V sites. More importantly, Al doping partially converted the polymeric vanadyl species into monomeric ones, thereby inhibiting the near-surface and bulk lattice oxygen mobility of the V2O5-WO3/TiO2 catalyst, while Mo doping resulted in vanadyl polymerization with an enriched V5+ chemical state and exhibited superior MPC activity and COx selectivity. Our work shows that antipoisoning catalysts can be designed with the combination of site protection and occurrence state modification of the active species.
               
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