CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. –– Using a technique called ultrasonic spray pyrolysis,
researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have created
an improved catalyst for removing smelly sulfur-containing compounds from gasoline
and other fossil fuels. The improved catalyst is a form of molybdenum disulfide,
most commonly recognized as the black lubricant used to grease automobiles
and machinery.
Molybdenum disulfide is made of long flat layers of molybdenum metal atoms sandwiched
above and below by single atomic layers of sulfur. The interactions between sulfur-sulfur
planes are weak, so they can easily slide past one another, providing excellent
high-temperature lubrication.
Molybdenum disulfide's other important commercial application is as a catalyst
used by the petroleum industry to remove ecologically damaging sulfur-containing
compounds in gasoline. When burned, these sulfur compounds cause the formation
of acid rain.
“The flat planes of molybdenum disulfide that make it a good lubricant also decrease
its ability to react with fuels to remove sulfur,” said Ken Suslick, the Marvin
T. Schmidt Professor of Chemistry at
Illinois and a researcher at the Beckman
Institute for Advanced Science and Technology . “This is because all the
reactions necessary for sulfur removal occur on the edges of the long planes,
and the bigger the planes, the less relative edge there is.“
Using ultrasonic spray pyrolysis, Suslick and graduate student Sara Skrabalak
discovered a way to make a highly porous network of molybdenum disulfide that
preferentially exposes the catalytic edges. The researchers describe their work
in a paper that has been accepted for publication in the Journal of the American
Chemical Society, and posted on its Web site. Funding was provided by the National
Science Foundation.
Using an ordinary household ultrasonic humidifier, Suslick and Skrabalak spray
small droplets of precursor solutions into micron-sized droplets. The droplets
are then carried by a gas stream into a furnace, where the solvent evaporates
and dissolved substances react to form a product.
This spray-synthesis technique has allowed for the continuous, inexpensive production
of spherical powders of varying composition. Research efforts are expanding this
technique to the production of nanoparticles and industrially important catalysts.
The new form of molybdenum disulfide is made by spraying droplets of a water
solution of ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (a molybdenum disulfide precursor) and
colloidal silica (very fine sand). As the droplets are heated in the furnace,
water evaporates and a molybdenum disulfide/silica composite is formed. The composite
is then treated with hydrofluoric acid, which etches away the silica and leaves
a network of molybdenum disulfide behind.
“This treatment leaves pores where the silica used to be and exposes the catalytically
active edge of molybdenum disulfide,” Suslick said. “Molybdenum disulfide is
the standard industrial catalyst for hydrodesulfurization (the removal of sulfur
from fuels using hydrogen), but this unique form of molybdenum disulfide has
superior catalytic properties when compared to conventionally synthesized molybdenum
disulfide.”
In addition, the new spray-synthesis route to catalytic materials is simple,
easily scaled-up, and can be adapted to other industrial materials.
Editor's note: To reach Ken Suslick, call 217-333-2794; e-mail: ksuslick@uiuc.edu
James E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
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