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Abstract To enhance the reaction kinetics without sacrificing activity in porous materials, one potential solution is to utilize the anisotropic distribution of pores and channels besides enriching active centers at the reactive surfaces. Herein, by designing a unique distribution of oriented pores and single crystalline array structures in the presence of abundant acid sites as demonstrated in the ZSM-5 nanorod arrays grown on monoliths, both enhanced dynamics and improved capacity are exhibited simultaneously in propene capture at low temperature within a short duration. Meanwhile, the ZSM-5 array also helps mitigate the long-chain HCs and coking formation due to the enhanced diffusion of reactants in and reaction products out of the array structures. Further integrating the ZSM-5 array with Co3O4nanoarray enables comprehensive propene removal throughout a wider temperature range. The array structured film design could offer energy-efficient solutions to overcome both sorption and reaction kinetic restrictions in various solid porous materials for various energy and chemical transformation applications.more » « less
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TiO 2 supported catalysts have been widely studied for the selective catalytic reduction (SCR) of NO x ; however, comprehensive understanding of synergistic interactions in multi-component SCR catalysts is still lacking. Herein, transition metal elements (V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, La, and Ce) were loaded onto TiO 2 nanoarrays via ion-exchange using protonated titanate precursors. Amongst these catalysts, Mn-doped catalysts outperform the others with satisfactory NO conversion and N 2 selectivity. Cu co-doping into the Mn-based catalysts promotes their low-temperature activity by improving reducibility, enhancing surface Mn 4+ species and chemisorbed labile oxygen, and elevating the adsorption capacity of NH 3 and NO x species. While Ce co-doping with Mn prohibits the surface adsorption and formation of NH 3 and NO x derived species, it boosts the N 2 selectivity at high temperatures. By combining Cu and Ce as doping elements in the Mn-based catalysts, both the low-temperature activity and the high-temperature N 2 selectivity are enhanced, and the Langmuir–Hinshelwood reaction mechanism was proved to dominate in the trimetallic Cu–Ce–5Mn/TiO 2 catalysts due to the low energy barrier.more » « less