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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(22): 15219-15229, 2024 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38775440

ABSTRACT

Unraveling the catalyst surface structure and behavior during reactions is essential for both mechanistic understanding and performance optimization. Here we report a phenomenon of facet-dependent surface restructuring intrinsic to ß-Ni(OH)2 catalysts during oxygen evolution reaction (OER), discovered by the correlative ex situ and operando characterization. The ex situ study after OER reveals ß-Ni(OH)2 restructuring at the edge facets to form nanoporous Ni1-xO, which is Ni deficient containing Ni3+ species. Operando liquid transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and Raman spectroscopy further identify the active role of the intermediate ß-NiOOH phase in both the OER catalysis and Ni1-xO formation, pinpointing the complete surface restructuring pathway. Such surface restructuring is shown to effectively increase the exposed active sites, accelerate Ni oxidation kinetics, and optimize *OH intermediate bonding energy toward fast OER kinetics, which leads to an extraordinary activity enhancement of ∼16-fold. Facilitated by such a self-activation process, the specially prepared ß-Ni(OH)2 with larger edge facets exhibits a 470-fold current enhancement than that of the benchmark IrO2, demonstrating a promising way to optimize metal-(oxy)hydroxide-based catalysts.

2.
Nano Lett ; 23(23): 10765-10771, 2023 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37963268

ABSTRACT

High-entropy alloy (HEA) nanoparticles (NPs) have been emerging with superior compositional tunability and multielemental synergy, presenting a unique platform for material discovery and performance optimization. Here we report a synthetic approach utilizing hollow-carbon confinement in the ordinary furnace annealing to achieve the nonequilibrium HEA-NPs such as Pt0.45Fe0.18Co0.12Ni0.15Mn0.10 with uniform size ∼5.9 nm. The facile temperature control allows us not only to reveal the detailed reaction pathway through ex situ characterization but also to tailor the HEA-NP structure from the crystalline solid solution to intermetallic. The preconfinement of metal precursors is the key to ensure the uniform distribution of metal nanoparticles with confined volume, which is essential to prevent the thermodynamically favored phase separation even during the ordinary furnace annealing. Besides, the synthesized HEA-NPs exhibit remarkable activity and stability in oxygen reduction catalysis. The demonstrated synthetic approach may significantly expand the scope of HEA-NPs with uncharted composition and performance.

3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202414452, 2024 Aug 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39205492

ABSTRACT

All-soluble all-iron redox flow batteries (AIRFBs) are an innovative energy storage technology that offer significant financial benefits. Stable and affordable redox-active materials are essential for the commercialization of AIRFBs, yet the battery stability must be significantly improved to achieve practical value. Herein, ferrous complexes combined with the triisopropanolamine (TIPA) ligand are identified as promising anolytes to extend battery life by reducing cross-contamination due to a pronounced steric hindrance effect. The coordination structure and failure mechanism of our Fe-TIPA complexes were determined by molecular dynamics simulation and spectroscopic experiments. By coupling with [Fe(CN)6]4-/3-, Fe-TIPA/Fe-CN AIRFBs retained excellent stability exceeding 1831 cycles at 80 mA ⋅ cm-2, yielding an energy efficiency of ~80 % and maintaining a steady discharge capacity. Moreover, the all-soluble electrolyte was tested in an industrial-scale Fe-TIPA/Fe-CN AIRFB prototype energy storage system, where an energy efficiency of 81.3 % was attained. Given the abundance of iron resources, we model the TIPA AIRFB electrolyte cost to be as low as 32.37 $/kWh, which is significantly cheaper than the current commercial level. This work demonstrates that steric hindrance is an effective measure to extended battery life, facilitating the commercial development of affordable flow batteries.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(35): 19312-19320, 2023 Sep 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37611205

ABSTRACT

The establishment of active sites as the frustrated Lewis pair (FLP) has recently attracted much attention ranging from homogeneous to heterogeneous systems in the field of catalysis. Their unquenched reactivity of Lewis acid and base pairs in close proximity that are unable to form stable adducts has been shown to activate small molecules such as dihydrogen heterolytically. Herein, we show that grafted Ru metal-organic framework-based catalysts prepared via N-containing linkers are rather catalytically inactive for H2 activation despite the application of elevated temperatures. However, upon light illumination, charge polarization of the anchored Ru bipyridine complex can form a transient Lewis acid-base pair, Ru+-N- via metal-to-ligand charge transfer, as confirmed by time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) calculations to carry out effective H2-D2 exchange. FTIR and 2-D NMR endorse the formation of such reactive intermediate(s) upon light irradiation.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 2023 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37023113

ABSTRACT

A cross-coupling reaction via the dehydrogenative route over heterogeneous solid atomic catalysts offers practical solutions toward an economical and sustainable elaboration of simple organic substrates. The current utilization of this technology is, however, hampered by limited molecular definition of many solid catalysts. Here, we report the development of Cu-M dual-atom catalysts (where M = Co, Ni, Cu, and Zn) supported on a hierarchical USY zeolite to mediate efficient dehydrogenative cross-coupling of unprotected phenols with amine partners. Over 80% isolated yields have been attained over Cu-Co-USY, which shows much superior reactivity when compared with our Cu1 and other Cu-M analogues. This amination reaction has hence involved simple and non-forceful reaction condition requirements. The superior reactivity can be attributed to (1) the specifically designed bimetallic Cu-Co active sites within the micropore for "co-adsorption-co-activation" of the reaction substrates and (2) the facile intracrystalline (meso/micropore) diffusion of the heterocyclic organic substrates. This study offers critical insights into the engineering of next-generation solid atomic catalysts with complex reaction steps.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(26): 14548-14561, 2023 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37343126

ABSTRACT

Catalytic NH3 synthesis and decomposition offer a new promising way to store and transport renewable energy in the form of NH3 from remote or offshore sites to industrial plants. To use NH3 as a hydrogen carrier, it is important to understand the catalytic functionality of NH3 decomposition reactions at an atomic level. Here, we report for the first time that Ru species confined in a 13X zeolite cavity display the highest specific catalytic activity of over 4000 h-1 for the NH3 decomposition with a lower activation barrier, compared to most reported catalytic materials in the literature. Mechanistic and modeling studies clearly indicate that the N-H bond of NH3 is ruptured heterolytically by the frustrated Lewis pair of Ruδ+-Oδ- in the zeolite identified by synchrotron X-rays and neutron powder diffraction with Rietveld refinement as well as other characterization techniques including solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, in situ diffuse reflectance infrared transform spectroscopy, and temperature-programmed analysis. This contrasts with the homolytic cleavage of N-H displayed by metal nanoparticles. Our work reveals the unprecedented unique behavior of cooperative frustrated Lewis pairs created by the metal species on the internal zeolite surface, resulting in a dynamic hydrogen shuttling from NH3 to regenerate framework Brønsted acid sites that eventually are converted to molecular hydrogen.

7.
Small ; 18(5): e2104844, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34825478

ABSTRACT

Single-atom catalysts have attracted attention in the past decade since they maximize the utilization of active sites and facilitate the understanding of product distribution in some catalytic reactions. Recently, this idea has been extended to single-atom nanozymes (SAzymes) for the mimicking of natural enzymes such as horseradish peroxidase (HRP) often used in bioanalytical applications. Herein, it is demonstrated that those SAzymes without constructing the reaction pocket of HRP still undergo the OH radical-mediated pathway like most of the reported nanozymes. Their positively charged single-atom centers resulting from support electronegative oxygen/nitrogen hinder the reductive conversion of H2 O2 to OH radicals and hence display low activity per site. In contrast, it is found that this step can be facilitated over their metallic counterparts on cluster nanozymes with much higher site activity and atom efficiency (cf. SAzymes with 100% atom utilization). Besides the mimicking of HRP in glucose detection, cluster nanozymes are also demonstrated as a better oxidase mimetic for glutathione detection.


Subject(s)
Oxidoreductases , Peroxidase , Carbon/chemistry , Catalytic Domain , Peroxidases
8.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(37): e202203836, 2022 Sep 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35852815

ABSTRACT

The design of efficient non-noble metal catalysts for CO2 hydrogenation to fuels and chemicals is desired yet remains a challenge. Herein, we report that single Mo atoms with a MoN3 (pyrrolic) moiety enable remarkable CO2 adsorption and hydrogenation to CO, as predicted by density functional theory studies and evidenced by a high and stable conversion of CO2 reaching about 30.4 % with a CO selectivity of almost 100 % at 500 °C and very low H2 partial pressure. Atomically dispersed MoN3 is calculated to facilitate CO2 activation and reduces CO2 to CO* via the direct dissociation path. Furthermore, the highest transition state energy in CO formation is 0.82 eV, which is substantially lower than that of CH4 formation (2.16 eV) and accounts for the dominant yield of CO. The enhanced catalytic performances of Mo/NC originate from facile CO desorption with the help of dispersed Mo on nitrogen-doped carbon (Mo/NC), and in the absence of Mo nanoparticles. The resulting catalyst preserves good stability without degradation of CO2 conversion rate even after 68 hours of continuous reaction. This finding provides a promising route for the construction of highly active, selective, and robust single-atom non-precious metal catalysts for reverse water-gas shift reaction.

9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(21): 7979-7990, 2021 Jun 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34019424

ABSTRACT

Transition metal doped chalcogenides are one of the most important classes of catalysts that have been attracting increasing attention for petrochemical and energy related chemical transformations due to their unique physiochemical properties. For practical applications, achieving maximum atom utilization by homogeneous dispersion of metals on the surface of chalcogenides is essential. Herein, we report a detailed study of a deposition method using thiourea coordinated transition metal complexes. This method allows the preparation of a library of a wide range of single atoms including both noble and non-noble transition metals (Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Pt, Pd, Ru) with a metal loading as high as 10 wt % on various ultrathin 2D chalcogenides (MoS2, MoSe2, WS2 and WSe2). As demonstrated by the state-of-the-art characterization, the doped single transition metal atoms interact strongly with surface anions and anion vacancies in the exfoliated 2D materials, leading to high metal dispersion in the absence of agglomeration. Taking Fe on MoS2 as a benchmark, it has been found that Fe is atomically dispersed until 10 wt %, and beyond this loading, formation of coplanar Fe clusters is evident. Atomic Fe, with a high electron density at its conduction band, exhibits a superior intrinsic activity and stability in CO2 hydrogenation to CO per Fe compared to corresponding surface Fe clusters and other Fe catalysts reported for reverse water-gas-shift reactions.

10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(24): 9105-9112, 2021 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34047552

ABSTRACT

Hydrogen spillover is the phenomenon where a hydrogen atom, generated from the dissociative chemisorption of dihydrogen on the surface of a metal species, migrates from the metal to the catalytic support. This phenomenon is regarded as a promising avenue for hydrogen storage, yet the atomic mechanism for how the hydrogen atom can be transferred to the support has remained controversial for decades. As a result, the development of catalytic support for such a purpose is only limited to typical reducible oxide materials. Herein, by using a combination of in situ spectroscopic and imaging technique, we are able to visualize and observe the atomic pathway for which hydrogen travels via a frustrated Lewis pair that has been constructed on a nonreducible metal oxide. The interchangeable status between the hydrogen, proton, and hydride is carefully characterized and demonstrated. It is envisaged that this study has opened up new design criteria for hydrogen storage material.

11.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(37): 16039-16046, 2020 Sep 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32458500

ABSTRACT

There is increasing interest in capturing H2 generated from renewables with CO2 to produce methanol. However, renewable hydrogen production is expensive and in limited quantity compared to CO2 . Excess CO2 and limited H2 in the feedstock gas is not favorable for CO2 hydrogenation to methanol, causing low activity and poor methanol selectivity. Now, a class of Rh-In catalysts with optimal adsorption properties to the intermediates of methanol production is presented. The Rh-In catalyst can effectively catalyze methanol synthesis but inhibit the reverse water-gas shift reaction under H2 -deficient gas flow and shows the best competitive methanol productivity under industrially applicable conditions in comparison with reported values. This work demonstrates a strong potential of Rh-In bimetallic composition, from which a convenient methanol synthesis based on flexible feedstock compositions (such as H2 /CO2 from biomass derivatives) with lower energy cost can be established.

12.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 25(Pt 5): 1395-1399, 2018 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30179178

ABSTRACT

This work reports an unconventional defect engineering approach using synchrotron-radiation-based X-rays on ceria nanocrystal catalysts of particle sizes 4.4-10.6 nm. The generation of a large number of oxygen-vacancy defects (OVDs), and therefore an effective reduction of cations, has been found in CeO2 catalytic materials bombarded by high-intensity synchrotron X-ray beams of beam size 1.5 mm × 0.5 mm, photon energies of 5.5-7.8 keV and photon fluxes up to 1.53 × 1012 photons s-1. The experimentally observed cation reduction was theoretically explained by a first-principles formation-energy calculation for oxygen vacancy defects. The results clearly indicate that OVD formation is mainly a result of X-ray-excited core holes that give rise to valence holes through electron down conversion in the material. Thermal annealing and subvalent Y-doping were also employed to modulate the efficiency of oxygen escape, providing extra control on the X-ray-induced OVD generating process. Both the core-hole-dominated bond breaking and oxygen escape mechanisms play pivotal roles for efficient OVD formation. This X-ray irradiation approach, as an alternative defect engineering method, can be applied to a wide variety of nanostructured materials for physical-property modification.

13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(36): 12670-12680, 2017 09 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28806077

ABSTRACT

Hydrated niobium oxides are used as strong solid acids with a wide variety of catalytic applications, yet the correlations between structure and acidity remain unclear. New insights into the structural features giving rise to Lewis and Brønsted acid sites are presently achieved. It appears that Lewis acid sites can arise from lower coordinate NbO5 and in some cases NbO4 sites, which are due to the formation of oxygen vacancies in thin and flexible NbO6 systems. Such structural flexibility of Nb-O systems is particularly pronounced in high surface area nanostructured materials, including few-layer to monolayer or mesoporous Nb2O5·nH2O synthesized in the presence of stabilizers. Bulk materials on the other hand only possess a few acid sites due to lower surface areas and structural rigidity: small numbers of Brønsted acid sites on HNb3O8 arise from a protonic structure due to the water content, whereas no acid sites are detected for anhydrous crystalline H-Nb2O5.

15.
iScience ; 27(8): 110571, 2024 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39184443

ABSTRACT

Nitrogen doped carbon materials have been studied as catalyst support for ammonia decomposition. There are 4 different types of nitrogen environments (graphitic, pyrrolic, pyridinic and nitrogen oxide) on the amorphous support identified. In this paper, we report a 5%Ru on MgCO3 pre-treated nitrogen doped carbon catalyst with high content of edge nitrogen-containing sites which displays an ammonia conversion rate of over 90% at 500°C and WHSV = 30,000 mL gcat -1 h-1. It also gives an impressive hydrogen production rate of 31.3 mmol/(min gcat) with low apparent activation energy of 43 kJ mol-1. Fundamental studies indicate that the distinct average Ru-N4 coordination site on edge regions is responsible for such high catalytic activity. Ammonia is stepwise decomposed via a Ru-N(H)-N(H)-Ru intermediate. This associative mechanism circumvents the direct cleavage of energetic surface nitrogen from metal to form N2 hence lowering the activation barrier for the decomposition over this catalyst.

16.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 11(41): e2401814, 2024 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39269738

ABSTRACT

Single-atom catalysts (SACs), featuring highly uniform active sites, tunable coordination environments, and synergistic effects with support, have emerged as one of the most efficient catalysts for various reactions, particularly for electrochemical CO2 reduction (ECR). However, the scalability of SACs is restricted due to the limited choice of available support and problems that emerge when preparing SACs by thermal deposition. Here, an in situ reconstruction method for preparing SACs is developed with a variety of atomic sites, including nickel, cadmium, cobalt, and magnesium. Driven by electricity, different oxygen-containing metal precursors, such as MOF-74 and metal oxides, are directly atomized onto nitrogen-doped carbon (NC) supports, yielding SACs with variable metal active sites and coordination structures. The electrochemical force facilitates the in situ generation of bonds between the metal and the supports without the need for additional complex steps. A series of MNxOy (M denotes metal) SACs on NC have been synthesized and utilized for ECR. Among these, NiNxOy SACs using Ni-MOF-74 as a metal precursor exhibit excellent ECR performance. This universal and general SAC synthesis strategy at room temperature is simpler than most reported synthesis methods to date, providing practical guidance for the design of the next generation of high-performance SACs.

17.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 420, 2024 Jan 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38200021

ABSTRACT

Designing high-performance thermal catalysts with stable catalytic sites is an important challenge. Conventional wisdom holds that strong metal-support interactions can benefit the catalyst performance, but there is a knowledge gap in generalizing this effect across different metals. Here, we have successfully developed a generalizable strong metal-support interaction strategy guided by Tammann temperatures of materials, enabling functional oxide encapsulation of transition metal nanocatalysts. As an illustrative example, Co@BaAl2O4 core@shell is synthesized and tracked in real-time through in-situ microscopy and spectroscopy, revealing an unconventional strong metal-support interaction encapsulation mechanism. Notably, Co@BaAl2O4 exhibits exceptional activity relative to previously reported core@shell catalysts, displaying excellent long-term stability during high-temperature chemical reactions and overcoming the durability and reusability limitations of conventional supported catalysts. This pioneering design and widely applicable approach has been validated to guide the encapsulation of various transition metal nanoparticles for environmental tolerance functionalities, offering great potential to advance energy, catalysis, and environmental fields.

18.
Chem Sci ; 15(24): 9201-9215, 2024 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38903226

ABSTRACT

The development of new recyclable and inexpensive electrochemically active species for water oxidation catalysis is the most crucial step for future utilization of renewables. Particularly, transition metal complexes containing internal multiple, cooperative metal centers to couple with redox catalysts in the inorganic Keggin-type polyoxometalate (POM) framework at high potential or under extreme pH conditions would be promising candidates. However, most reported Ni-containing POMs have been highly unstable towards hydrolytic decomposition, which precludes them from application as water oxidation catalysts (WOCs). Here, we have prepared new tri-Ni-containing POMs with variable oxidation states by charge tailored synthetic strategies for the first time and developed them as recyclable POMs for water oxidation catalysts. In addition, by implanting corresponding POM anions into the positively charged MIL-101(Cr) metal-organic framework (MOF), the entrapped Ni2+/Ni3+ species can show complete recyclability for water oxidation catalysis without encountering uncontrolled hydrolysis of the POM framework. As a result, a low onset potential of approximately 1.46 V vs. NHE for water oxidation with stable WOC performance is recorded. Based on this study, rational design and stabilization of other POM-electrocatalysts containing different multiple transition metal centres could be made possible.

19.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 15184, 2023 Sep 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37704697

ABSTRACT

We present a new composite catalyst system of highly defective graphene quantum dots (HDGQDs)-doped 1T/2H-MoS2 for efficient hydrogen evolution reactions (HER). The high electrocatalytic activity, represented by an overpotential of 136.9 mV and a Tafel slope of 57.1 mV/decade, is due to improved conductivity, a larger number of active sites in 1T-MoS2 compared to that in 2H-MoS2, and additional defects introduced by HDGQDs. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), Raman spectroscopy, x-ray diffraction (XRD) and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) were used to characterize both the 1T/2H-MoS2 and GQDs components while Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) was employed to identify the functional groups on the edge and defect sites in the HDGQDs. The morphology of the composite catalyst was also examined by field emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM). All experimental data demonstrated that each component contributes unique advantages that synergistically lead to the significantly improved electrocatalytic activity for HER in the composite catalyst system.

20.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 6576, 2023 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37852958

ABSTRACT

Realizing viable electrocatalytic processes for energy conversion/storage strongly relies on an atomic-level understanding of dynamic configurations on catalyst-electrolyte interface. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) has become an indispensable tool to in situ investigate dynamic natures of electrocatalysts but still suffers from limited energy resolution, leading to significant electronic transitions poorly resolved. Herein, we highlight advanced X-ray spectroscopies beyond conventional XAS, with emphasis on their unprecedented capabilities of deciphering key configurations of electrocatalysts. The profound complementarities of X-ray spectroscopies from various aspects are established in a probing energy-dependent "in situ spectroscopy map" for comprehensively understanding the solid-liquid interface. This perspective establishes an indispensable in situ research model for future studies and offers exciting research prospects for scientists and spectroscopists.

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