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George W. Graham

Bio: George W. Graham is an academic researcher from University of California, Irvine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Catalysis & Oxide. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 98 publications receiving 4879 citations. Previous affiliations of George W. Graham include University of Michigan & University of California, Riverside.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the steady-state, water-gas-shift kinetics were measured on model, ceria-supported, Pd, Pt, and Rh catalysts and compared to rates obtained on alumina-supported catalysts.
Abstract: Steady-state, water-gas-shift kinetics were measured on model, ceria-supported, Pd, Pt, and Rh catalysts and compared to rates obtained on alumina-supported catalysts. When ceria was calcined at low temperatures prior to addition of the precious metal, the specific rates were found to be identical for each of the metals, with an activation energy of 11 ± 1 kcal/mol and reaction orders of zero and one for CO and H 2 O respectively. For comparison, specific rates on Rh/alumina were at least two orders of magnitude lower. However, ceria structure strongly affected the results. When ceria was calcined to high temperatures to increase crystallite size, prior to the addition of Pd, specific rates were a factor of 50 lower at 515 K and the activation energy was found to be much higher, 21 ± 1 kcal/mol. By comparison with results from an earlier study of CO oxidation [17], we propose that water-gas shift on ceria-supported metals occurs primarily through a bifunctional mechanism in which CO adsorbed on the precious metal is oxidized by ceria, which in turn is oxidized by water. Deactivation of the catalyst following growth in the ceria crystallite size is due to the decreased reducibility of large ceria crystallites. The implications of these results for automotive, emission-control catalysts is discussed.

807 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The general trend has been one of increasingly complex catalyst formulations in response to increasingly stringent emission standards as discussed by the authors, but with greater emphasis on optimizing catalyst formulations for lean-burn applications and reducing catalyst cost and complexity without sacrificing performance.

693 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed the active catalytic sites are cationic interfacial Pt atoms bonded to TiO2 and that Ptiso exhibits optimal reactivity because every atom is exposed for catalysis and forms an interfacial site withTiO2.
Abstract: Oxide-supported precious metal nanoparticles are widely used industrial catalysts. Due to expense and rarity, developing synthetic protocols that reduce precious metal nanoparticle size and stabilize dispersed species is essential. Supported atomically dispersed, single precious metal atoms represent the most efficient metal utilization geometry, although debate regarding the catalytic activity of supported single precious atom species has arisen from difficulty in synthesizing homogeneous and stable single atom dispersions, and a lack of site-specific characterization approaches. We propose a catalyst architecture and characterization approach to overcome these limitations, by depositing ∼1 precious metal atom per support particle and characterizing structures by correlating scanning transmission electron microscopy imaging and CO probe molecule infrared spectroscopy. This is demonstrated for Pt supported on anatase TiO2. In these structures, isolated Pt atoms, Ptiso, remain stable through various condit...

454 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of adding CeO2 to PdAl2O3 as a catalyst modifier were investigated by X-ray photo-electron spectroscopy and Xray diffraction.

277 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a combination of techniques including oxygen storage capacity (OSC) measurements were used to compare the performance of pure cerias, silica-doped ceria, ceria-zirconia solid solutions, and ceria zirconica solid solutions with partial incorporation of praseodymium in the structure were used as high-surface-area powders and used as supports in model Pd automotive three-way catalysts prepared at Ford.

219 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A survey of the use of cerium oxide and CeO2-containing materials as oxidation and reduction catalysts is presented in this paper, with a special focus on catalytic interaction with small molecules such as hydrogen, carbon monoxide, oxygen, and nitric oxide.
Abstract: Over the past several years, cerium oxide and CeO2-containing materials have come under intense scrutiny as catalysts and as structural and electronic promoters of heterogeneous catalytic reactions. Recent developments regarding the characterization of ceria and CeO2-containing catalysts are critically reviewed with a special focus towards catalyst interaction with small molecules such as hydrogen, carbon monoxide, oxygen, and nitric oxide. Relevant catalytic and technological applications such as the use of ceria in automotive exhaust emission control and in the formulation of SO x reduction catalysts is described. A survey of the use of CeO2-containing materials as oxidation and reduction catalysts is also presented.

3,077 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Review will compare the results obtained from different systems and try to give a picture on how different types of metal species work in different reactions and give perspectives on the future directions toward better understanding of the catalytic behavior of different metal entities in a unifying manner.
Abstract: Metal species with different size (single atoms, nanoclusters, and nanoparticles) show different catalytic behavior for various heterogeneous catalytic reactions. It has been shown in the literature that many factors including the particle size, shape, chemical composition, metal–support interaction, and metal–reactant/solvent interaction can have significant influences on the catalytic properties of metal catalysts. The recent developments of well-controlled synthesis methodologies and advanced characterization tools allow one to correlate the relationships at the molecular level. In this Review, the electronic and geometric structures of single atoms, nanoclusters, and nanoparticles will be discussed. Furthermore, we will summarize the catalytic applications of single atoms, nanoclusters, and nanoparticles for different types of reactions, including CO oxidation, selective oxidation, selective hydrogenation, organic reactions, electrocatalytic, and photocatalytic reactions. We will compare the results o...

2,700 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Aug 2003-Science
TL;DR: It is reported here that for the class of nanostructured gold– or platinum–cerium oxide catalysts, which are active for the water-gas shift reaction, metal nanoparticles do not participate in the reaction.
Abstract: Traditional analysis of reactions catalyzed by supported metals involves the structure of the metallic particles. However, we report here that for the class of nanostructured gold- or platinum-cerium oxide catalysts, which are active for the water-gas shift reaction, metal nanoparticles do not participate in the reaction. Nonmetallic gold or platinum species strongly associated with surface cerium-oxygen groups are responsible for the activity.

2,616 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 2018
TL;DR: A review of single-atom catalysts can be found in this paper, where the authors discuss the utility of SACs in a broad scope of industrially important reactions and highlight the advantages these catalysts have over those presently used.
Abstract: Single-atom catalysis has arguably become the most active new frontier in heterogeneous catalysis. Aided by recent advances in practical synthetic methodologies, characterization techniques and computational modelling, we now have a large number of single-atom catalysts (SACs) that exhibit distinctive performances for a wide variety of chemical reactions. This Perspective summarizes recent experimental and computational efforts aimed at understanding the bonding in SACs and how this relates to catalytic performance. The examples described here illustrate the utility of SACs in a broad scope of industrially important reactions and highlight the advantages these catalysts have over those presently used. SACs have well-defined active centres, such that unique opportunities exist for the rational design of new catalysts with high activities, selectivities and stabilities. Indeed, given a certain practical application, we can often design a suitable SAC; thus, the field has developed very rapidly and afforded promising catalyst leads. Moreover, the control we have over certain SAC structures paves the way for designing base metal catalysts with the activities of noble metal catalysts. It appears that we are entering a new era of heterogeneous catalysis in which we have control over well-dispersed single-atom active sites whose properties we can readily tune. Single-atom catalysts are heterogeneous materials featuring active metals sites atomically dispersed on a surface. This Review describes methods by which we prepare and characterize these materials, as well as how we can tune their catalytic performance in a variety of important reactions.

2,306 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review has a wide view on all those aspects related to ceria which promise to produce an important impact on the authors' life, encompassing fundamental knowledge of CeO2 and its properties, characterization toolbox, emerging features, theoretical studies, and all the catalytic applications, organized by their degree of establishment on the market.
Abstract: Cerium dioxide (CeO2, ceria) is becoming an ubiquitous constituent in catalytic systems for a variety of applications. 2016 sees the 40th anniversary since ceria was first employed by Ford Motor Company as an oxygen storage component in car converters, to become in the years since its inception an irreplaceable component in three-way catalysts (TWCs). Apart from this well-established use, ceria is looming as a catalyst component for a wide range of catalytic applications. For some of these, such as fuel cells, CeO2-based materials have almost reached the market stage, while for some other catalytic reactions, such as reforming processes, photocatalysis, water-gas shift reaction, thermochemical water splitting, and organic reactions, ceria is emerging as a unique material, holding great promise for future market breakthroughs. While much knowledge about the fundamental characteristics of CeO2-based materials has already been acquired, new characterization techniques and powerful theoretical methods are dee...

1,710 citations