Perovskites are currently on everyone’s lips and have made it in high-impact scientific journals because of the revolutionary hybrid organic–inorganic lead halide perovskite materials for solar cells. The mixed metal oxide counterparts have received equal interest in a variety of technological applications for decades. The interest for perovskite-type oxides lies in their vast compositional and structural variability that can be exploited to tailor physico-chemical properties such as oxygen mobility and vacancies, redox, as well as electronic and ionic conductivities for specific technical application. Besides oxygen mobility and the variety of element combinations adopting the perovskite-type structure, a further property is interesting for catalytic applications—the possibility to exploit them as a precursor of active catalysts upon exsolution of transition metals in the form of particles at their surface. Transition metals have been shown to experience reversible segregation: Reduced metal nanoparticles are exposed at the moment they need to be used for a catalytic process. The reversible segregation allows their protection from poisoning and growth, thus regenerating the original mixed oxide structure. The interaction between exsolved particles and defective mixed metal oxides also results in potentially new material properties that are difficult to obtain by material synthesis or by combination of the same transition element and other metal oxide supports.
In this Special Issue, various aspects of the synthesis, structure, as well as sorptive and catalytic properties of perovskite-type mixed oxides are presented for a wide range of catalytic processes, demonstrating once more the versatility of this class of materials.
Rojas-Cervantes and co-workers review the utility of perovskite-type oxide-based oxidation catalysts for the treatment of wastewater using various oxidants, as well as ultraviolet-visible irradiation to promote photocatalysis [
1]. The authors analyze physico-chemical properties of perovskite-type oxides such as mobility of lattice oxygen and oxygen vacancy formation, stabilizing unusual oxidation states of the contributing elements that can be exploited to enhance advanced oxidation processes (AOP), making use of radicals.
In the contribution of the PrBaCo
2(1−x)Fe
2xO
6−δ layered double perovskite used as an electrocatalyst for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in alkaline media, Kim et al. [
2] demonstrate the promoting effect of Fe using X-ray absorption spectroscopy. Fe introduction into PrBaCo
2O
6−δ forces Co to adopt a lower oxidation state to allow for charge compensation. This stabilizes Co and the layered double perovskite against dissolution under the reaction conditions but sustains the formation of the active surface Co oxyhydroxide layer.
Guo et al. [
3] demonstrate the feasibility of using LaCo
yGa
1−yO
3 mixed oxides to catalyze the synthesis of alcohols (methanol/ethanol predominantly) from syngas. La
1−xK
xCo
0.65Ga
0.35O
3 is used as the precursor of segregated Co nanoparticles that are embedded within the La-Ga-O composite oxide, thus improving their stability in the reaction atmosphere. The role of K is found to increase the atomic dispersion of Co and improve the coking resistance of the composite catalyst by formation of La
2O
3.
In the work by Steiger et al. [
4], the reversible segregation of Ni as an active element for the water gas shift reaction, and a second transition metal is studied to explore the sulfur tolerance in solid oxide fuel cells. Only Fe out of Mn, Mo, Cr, and Fe is found to increase the sulfur tolerance of La
0.3Sr
0.55Ti
0.95Ni
0.05O
3±δ. The simultaneous segregation of Fe and Ni at high temperature does not hamper the reversible segregation–reintegration of the two metals within the perovskite mixed oxide upon oxidation, allowing for long-term use at high temperature.
Wark and co-workers present the photocatalytic activity of LaFeO
3 toward Rhodamine B decomposition and screen the optimal conditions to obtain the highest performance [
5]. Besides textural characterization, photoelectrochemical characterization was exploited to explain the different behavior with calcination temperature, showing that lower temperatures promoted the photo-induced charge carrier transfer and separation efficiency.
A density functional theory study by Glisenti et al. [
6] shows that substitution of La by Sr at the A-site of LaCoO
3 lowers the formation energy of oxygen vacancies that is beneficial for CO oxidation in three-way catalysts. Similar effects can be obtained at the B-site only by substitution of Co by Cu. Substitution effects appear to be greater in SrTiO
3.
The effect of partial substitution of Ti in BaTiO
3 used as a lean NO
x trap catalyst is studied by Aldridge et al. [
7] with respect to the influence on NO
x storage capacity. Especially, the use of Cu is beneficial as it promotes the segregation of Ba
2TiO
4 and NO
x storage. BaTi
0.8Cu
0.2O
3 exhibits the highest amount of oxygen vacancies and a storage capacity in the range of highly active noble metal-based catalysts.
A series of LaCo
1–xMn
xO
3 and LaCo
1–yNi
yO
3 catalysts are tested by Rønning and coworkers for NO oxidation to NO
2 that is a crucial step in the production of nitric acid [
8]. While LaCoO
3 exhibits the highest activity amongst the undoped perovskites, LaCo
0.75Ni
0.25O
3 and LaCo
0.75Mn
0.25O
3 are found to be optimum in substituted catalysts, showing that perovskites are promising catalysts for NO oxidation in industrial conditions.
Finally, a three-step reactive grinding process including solid-state synthesis, high-energy ball milling, and low-energy ball milling in wet conditions followed by calcination at 400 °C is used to prepare LaMnO
3 and LaFeO
3 by Heidinger et al. [
9]. In both cases, the catalytic performance for toluene oxidation increases after each synthesis step of the process in line with the increase in specific surface area that reaches ca. 19 m
2∙g
−1 for LaFeO
3.
I take the opportunity to thank the principal investigators and all authors of the contributed publications for their effort and for willing to make this Special Issue on perovskite-type oxides possible.