posted on 2025-02-18, 15:36authored byZhao Wang, Hao Yuan, Jian Tao, Shu-Lin Liu, Ying Hong, Zhi-Yi Hu, Jian Zhang, Bao-Lian Su
Semihydrogenation plays a key role in industrial hydrorefining
of light alkenes, with a market above 400 billion by 2027. The high
cost of commercial palladium-based catalysts strongly calls for innovation
but with great challenges. Herein, copper nanoparticles decorated
with a minimized ppm of Pd are developed through a chemical plating
process to integrate the catalytic advantages of copper and palladium
for achieving maximized catalysis in the semihydrogenation of a fatal
impurity of butadiene in alkene feedstocks. The developed Pd–Cu
catalyst (i.e., 114 ppm of Pd in Pd0.0033Cu1/TiO2) exhibits an unprecedented catalytic performance
superior to commercial Pd/Al2O3, with 100% butene
selectivity above 90% of butadiene conversion over 130 h on stream
at 90 °C. Further exploration reveals that the atomically dispersed
Pd on Cu nanoparticles, obtained at ultralow ppm levels of Pd loading,
induces a hidden but critical H2 trap, which concentrates
H2 on the Pd site for further H2 dissociation
that offers intermediate hydrogen atoms to the tandem butadiene semihydrogenation
over the third layer of Cu atoms neighboring Pd through hydrogen spillover.
Moreover, a threshold on Pd density was identified at Pd/Cu surficial
atomic ratio of 1/138 (i.e., Pd0.0033Cu1/TiO2) for maximizing butadiene semihydrogenation performance,
based on an extreme collaboration between Pd for H2 dissociation
and Cu for butadiene hydrogenation. This work provides important guidance
for developing noble metal-saving catalysts in industrial applications.