posted on 2025-07-05, 15:03authored byAidin Nejadsalim, Najmeh Bashiri, Maged F. Bekheet, Maik Alexander Rudolph, Julian Thomas Müller, Johannes Schmidt, Hamid Reza Godini, Reinhard Schomäcker, Arne Thomas, Oliver Görke, Aleksander Gurlo
Preventing the agglomeration and sintering of catalytically
active
platinum nanoparticles under reaction conditions is crucial for achieving
enhanced catalytic performance, particularly in dehydrogenation processes.
This work aims to design a core–sheath structure to protect
Pt nanoparticles from agglomeration on a substrate such as ceria (CeO2) and study the performance and stability of Pt nanoparticles
under sheath protection. An electrospinning technique was employed
to fabricate CeO2 nanofibers (NFs), followed by impregnating
Pt and introducing a silica (SiO2) sheath layer to obtain
Pt–CeO2@SiO2 core–sheath NFs.
The structural, morphological, and physical properties of the resulting
materials were evaluated by using X-ray diffraction (XRD), etching
depth-profile X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), scanning electron
microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and high-angle
annular dark-field high-resolution scanning transmission electron
microscopy (HAADF-STEM). The in situ XRD measurement followed by the
Rietveld refinement showed the protective effect of the sheath layer
against the agglomeration of Pt nanoparticles in Pt–CeO2@SiO2 materials. In the catalytic cyclohexane dehydrogenation
(CDH) reaction, Pt–CeO2@SiO2 materials
show a 4-fold increase in benzene yield compared to the Pt–CeO2 structure without the sheath layer, with both catalysts exhibiting
full selectivity for benzene.