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Ionically conducting materials as effective catalyst supports with potential implementations in emissions control catalysis

Joint Event: 5th International Conference on Green Chemistry and Technology & 6th International Conference on Environmental Chemistry and Engineering
July 24-26, 2017 Rome, Italy

Ioannis V Yentekakis

Technical University of Crete, Greece

Keynote: Trends in Green chem

Abstract:

Statement of the Problem: Nowadays, the abatement of CO, HCs, NOx and N2O emissions from automotive or stationary sources constitutes a subject of major environmental importance because of the major contribution of these pollutants to serious environmental problems, such as photochemical smog, acid rain, greenhouse effect and climate change as well as stratospheric ozone depletion (N2O). Heterogeneous catalysis plays a key role in pollutant abatement technologies and often provides the most attractive and efficient solutions as, for example, in automotive emissions control ΓΆΒ?Β? the most significant source of atmospheric pollution over the word. However, atmospheric pollution remains a huge and growing problem; therefore, an imperative need of even more efficient and economic catalytic abatement technologies remains as a highly desirable goal. An advanced catalyst promotion method that provides catalytic systems with exceptional activity and stability has currently attracted extensive attention for a wide range of applications related to energy production and environmental protection, is the subject herein. Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: Ionically conducting materials as catalyst supports can be used as tunable metalsupport interaction carriers, effectively controlling catalytic properties, via an effective dipolar layer of ionic promoter species formed at the catalyst particle surfaces, with concomitant dramatic effects on catalytic performance. The dipolar layer and its intensity (promoter species population), can be electrochemically controlled (Electrochemical Promotion or NEMCA effect) or can spontaneously be created on traditional-type highly dispersed catalysts, via thermally-driven spillover of ionic species from the support on the nanoparticle surfaces. Conclusion & Significance: Worth noting achievements on environmentally important catalytic reactions (CO, HCs, NOx, N2O abatement) have been accomplished by this concept of promotion. An additional implementation of the concept, which concerns catalyst nanoparticles stabilization against thermal sintering, a subject of great importance in industrial heterogeneous catalytic processes, has recently been discovered.

Biography :

Ioannis V Yentekakis is Full Professor of Physical Chemistry and Catalysis in the School of Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Crete (TUC), Greece. He received Chemical Engineering Diploma (1983) and PhD (1988) from the University of Patras. He has joined Princeton University USA, ICE-HT/FORTH Patras GR, Cambridge University UK as Senior Researcher, University of Patras, Dept. Chemical Engineering, as Assistant Professor (1996-2000), and finally Technical University of Crete as Associate (2001-06) and Full Professor (2006-today). He is regular member of the University Council of Technical University of Crete and Director of the Laboratory of Physical Chemistry & Chemical Processes. His current interest concerns development of novel materials and processes in heterogeneous catalysis for green and fine chemistry, environmental protection and renewable/sustainable energy generation. He authorized >100 peer-reviewed journal publications (with >3000 citations, h-index=32), >120 conference proceedings, 3 patents and 10 books.

Email: yyentek@isc.tuc.gr