Abstract
The water-gas shift (WGS) reaction (where carbon monoxide plus water yields dihydrogen and carbon dioxide) is an essential process for hydrogen generation and carbon monoxide removal in various energy-related chemical operations. This equilibrium-limited reaction is favored at a low working temperature. Potential application in fuel cells also requires a WGS catalyst to be highly active, stable, and energy-efficient and to match the working temperature of on-site hydrogen generation and consumption units. We synthesized layered gold (Au) clusters on a molybdenum carbide (a-MoC) substrate to create an interfacial catalyst system for the ultralow-temperature WGS reaction. Water was activated over a-MoC at 303 kelvin, whereas carbon monoxide adsorbed on adjacent Au sites was apt to react with surface hydroxyl groups formed from water splitting, leading to a high WGS activity at low temperatures.
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CITATION STYLE
Yao, S., Zhang, X., Zhou, W., Gao, R., Xu, W., Ye, Y., … Ma, D. (2017). Atomic-layered Au clusters on α-MoC as catalysts for the low-temperature water-gas shift reaction. Science, 357(6349). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aah4321
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