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Nanochanneling and Local Crystallization Engineering Accelerate Multiphase Single‐Atom Catalysis for Rapid Water Decontamination
Author(s) -
Liu Ya,
Wang Yuxian,
Wang Yunpeng,
Miao Jie,
Yang Jiajia,
Hu Kunsheng,
Sun Hongqi,
Xiao Jiadong,
Chen Chunmao,
Duan Xiaoguang,
Wang Shaobin
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
angewandte chemie international edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.831
H-Index - 550
eISSN - 1521-3773
pISSN - 1433-7851
DOI - 10.1002/anie.202504571
Subject(s) - catalysis , nanoreactor , chemical engineering , oxidizing agent , mass transfer , materials science , nanotechnology , adsorption , dissolution , carbon fibers , chemistry , organic chemistry , engineering , chromatography , composite number , composite material
Abstract Precise engineering of single‐atom catalysts (SACs) with optimal hierarchical structures and favorable local chemical environments remains a significant challenge to cater for multiphase heterogeneous processes. Here, we develop a universal strategy for synthesizing channel‐digging microspherical SACs that markedly enhance gas–liquid–solid mass transfer and fine‐tune the thermodynamics of catalytic ozonation. By catalytically graphitizing carbon microspheres and selectively etching amorphous carbon domains via mild combustion, we fabricate cross‐linked hierarchical graphitic nanochannels confining transition metal (e.g., Co, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni) single atoms (TMCSs‐Air). This nanoenvironment engineering increases interfacial ozone (O 3 ) mass transfer by 3.2‐fold and directs O 3 adsorption from a conventional “end‐on” to a bidental “side‐on” configuration. The enhanced inter‐orbital electronic interactions lower the O 3 activation barrier and form highly oxidizing surface‐confined O 3 (*O 3 ). Consequently, the CoCSs‐Air catalyst achieves a 3.6‐fold higher ozone utilization efficiency and a 4.2‐fold greater turnover frequency (TOF = 1580 min −1 ) compared with pristine Co‐doped carbon microspheres (CoCSs). Technical and economic evaluations further confirm the feasibility of TMCSs‐Air nanoreactors in treating real‐world petrochemical wastewater, highlighting its broader potential in overcoming gas diffusion barriers and tuning reaction pathways for multiphase heterogeneous catalysis.

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