S. Bernal et al., MICROSTRUCTURAL AND CHEMICAL-PROPERTIES OF CERIA-SUPPORTED RHODIUM CATALYSTS REDUCED AT 773-K, Journal of physical chemistry, 97(16), 1993, pp. 4118-4123
This work reports on the chemical and microstructural characterization
of a series of Rh/CeO2 catalysts. The volumetric adsorption and FTIR
spectroscopic studies show the occurrence of considerable changes in t
he chemistry of the H-2-(Rh/CeO2) system upon increasing the reduction
temperature from 623 to 773 K. However, the H/Rh values determined fr
om hydrogen isotherms at 191 K suggest that the rhodium microcrystals
remain chemically active after reduction at 773 K. The major effect of
the high-temperature reduction treatment would be the blocking of the
spillover process, much slower on the catalysts reduced at 773 K. In
agreement with this, no dramatic effect of the reduction temperature o
n the catalytic activity for benzene hydrogenation has been found. The
se observations contrast with some recent results in the literature, i
n accordance with which ceria-supported metal catalysts exhibit the so
-called SMSI effect. The high-resolution transmission electron microsc
opy (HRTEM) micrographs reported here for Rh/CeO2 catalysts show clean
, well-faceted rhodium particles. No evidences of metal decoration phe
nomena like those earlier reported for Rh/TiO2 could be obtained from
them. However, HRTEM images of the metal/support interface reveal an e
pitaxial growth of the rhodium microcrystal on ceria. The structural n
ature of this epitaxial relationship is rather singular leading to the
regular appearance of rhodium dislocations at the metal/support inter
face. In addition to several other observations also based on the HRTE
M images, the occurrence of such an epitaxy might well be interpreted
as being due to some kind of strong metal-support interaction. The ens
emble of results presented here suggests that the nature of this rhodi
um-ceria interaction is different from that referred to as the classic
SMSI effect.