Rhodium nanoparticles confined in titania nanotubes for efficient Hydrogen evolution from Ammonia Borane

J Colloid Interface Sci. 2022 Mar:609:755-763. doi: 10.1016/j.jcis.2021.11.078. Epub 2021 Nov 16.

Abstract

Designing efficient catalysts for hydrogen evolution from hydrolysis of ammonia borane (AB) have attracted considerable attention. Rhodium (Rh) based catalysts with rational design present remarkable catalytic performance for the reaction. Herein, we report the confined Rh@TiO2 catalysts synthesized by atomic layer deposition combining with the sacrificial template approach, in which the Rh nanoparticles are uniformly confined on the inner surface of the porous titania nanotubes. The optimized catalysts show high catalytic activity with a turnover frequency value of 334.1 molH2·molRh-1·min-1 and better durability. Mechanistic investigation demonstrates that the cleavage of OH bands in water should be the rate determining step, and the appropriate concentration of NaOH can further enhance the hydrogen evolution activity. The catalysts can also achieve the hydrogenation of various organic substrates using AB as the hydrogen source. In addition, our present strategy is general and can be extended to the synthesis of other confined catalysts for various catalytic reactions.

Keywords: Ammonia borane; Atomic layer deposition; Confined catalysts; Hydrogen evolution; Kinetic and isotopic analyses.