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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 2023 Mar 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36888984

RESUMEN

Single-atom catalysts have received significant attention for their ability to enable highly selective reactions. However, many reactions require more than one adjacent site to align reactants or break specific bonds. For example, breaking a C-O or O-H bond may be facilitated by a dual site containing an oxophilic element and a carbophilic or "hydrogenphilic" element that binds each molecular fragment. However, design of stable and well-defined dual-atom sites with desirable reactivity is difficult due to the complexity of multicomponent catalytic surfaces. Here, we describe a new type of dual-atom system, trimetallic dual-atom alloys, which were designed via computation of the alloying energetics. Through a broad computational screening we discovered that Pt-Cr dimers embedded in Ag(111) can be formed by virtue of the negative mixing enthalpy of Pt and Cr in Ag and the favorable interaction between Pt and Cr. These dual-atom alloy sites were then realized experimentally through surface science experiments that enabled the active sites to be imaged and their reactivity related to their atomic-scale structure. Specifically, Pt-Cr sites in Ag(111) can convert ethanol, whereas PtAg and CrAg are unreactive toward ethanol. Calculations show that the oxophilic Cr atom and the hydrogenphilic Pt atom act synergistically to break the O-H bond. Furthermore, ensembles with more than one Cr atom, present at higher dopant loadings, produce ethylene. Our calculations have identified many other thermodynamically favorable dual-atom alloy sites, and hence this work highlights a new class of materials that should offer new and useful chemical reactivity beyond the single-atom paradigm.

2.
Chem Sci ; 15(18): 6716-6725, 2024 May 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38725512

RESUMEN

Benzene, a high-volume chemical, is produced from larger molecules by inefficient and environmentally harmful processes. Recent changes in hydrocarbon feedstocks from oil to gas motivate research into small molecule upgrading. For example, the cyclotrimerization of acetylene reaction has been demonstrated on Pd, Pd alloy, and Cu surfaces and catalysts, but they are not 100% selective to benzene. We discovered that acetylene can be converted to benzene with 100% selectivity on the Ag(111) surface. Our temperature programmed desorption experiments reveal a threshold acetylene surface coverage of ∼one monolayer, above which benzene is formed. Furthermore, additional layers of acetylene increase the amount of benzene produced while retaining 100% selectivity. Our scanning tunneling microscopy images show that acetylene prefers square packing on the Ag(111) surface at low coverages, which converts to hexagonal packing when acetylene multilayers are present. Within this denser layer, features consistent with the proposed C4 intermediates of the cyclotrimerization process are observed. Density functional theory calculations demonstrate that the barrier for forming the crucial C4 intermediate generally decreases as acetylene multilayers are formed because the multilayer interacts more strongly with the surface in the transition state than in the initial state. Given that acetylene desorbs from Ag(111) at ∼90 K, the C4 intermediate on the pathway to benzene must be formed below this temperature, implying that if Ag-based heterogeneous catalysts can be run at sufficiently high pressure and low enough temperature, efficient and selective trimerization of acetylene to benzene may be possible.

3.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(47): 10561-10569, 2023 Nov 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37976045

RESUMEN

The identification of thermodynamic descriptors of catalytic performance is essential for the rational design of heterogeneous catalysts. Here, we investigate how spillover energy, a descriptor quantifying whether intermediates are more stable at the dopant or host metal sites, can be used to design single-atom alloys (SAAs) for formic acid dehydrogenation. Using theoretical calculations, we identify NiCu as a SAA with favorable spillover energy and demonstrate that formate intermediates produced after the initial O-H activation are more stable at Ni sites where rate-determining C-H activation occurs. Surface science experiments demonstrated that NiCu(111) SAAs are more reactive than Cu(111) while they still follow the formate reaction pathway. However, reactor studies of silica-supported NiCu SAA nanoparticles showed only a modest improvement over Cu resulting from surface coverage effects. Overall, this study demonstrates the potential of engineering SAAs using spillover energy as a design parameter and highlights the importance of adsorbate-adsorbate interactions under steady-state operation.

4.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 13(27): 6316-6322, 2022 Jul 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35792939

RESUMEN

Dicarbonyl species are ubiquitous on Rh/oxide catalysts and are known to form on Rh+ centers. However, dicarbonyl species have never been directly observed on single-atom alloys (SAAs) where the active site is metallic. Herein, using surface science and theoretical modeling, we provide evidence of dicarbonyl species at isolated Rh sites on a RhCu(100) SAA. This approach not only enables us to directly visualize dicarbonyl species at Rh sites but also demonstrates that the transition between the mono- and dicarbonyl configuration can be achieved by changing surface temperature and CO pressure. Density functional theory calculations further support the mono- and dicarbonyl assignments and provide evidence that these species should be stable on other SAA combinations. Together, these results provide a picture of the structure and energetics of both the mono- and dicarbonyl configurations on the RhCu(100) SAA surface and should aid with IR assignments on SAA nanoparticle catalysts.


Asunto(s)
Aleaciones , Catálisis
5.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(20): 8751-8757, 2020 Oct 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32940467

RESUMEN

The conversions of surface-bound alkyl groups to alkanes and alkenes are important steps in many heterogeneously catalyzed reactions. On the one hand, while Pt is ubiquitous in industry because of its high activity toward C-H activation, many Pt-based catalysts tend to overbind reactive intermediates, which leads to deactivation by carbon deposition and coke formation. On the other hand, Cu binds intermediates more weakly than Pt, but activation barriers tend to be higher on Cu. We examine the reactivity of ethyl, the simplest alkyl group that can undergo hydrogenation and dehydrogenation via ß-elimination, and show that isolated Pt atoms in Cu enable low-temperature hydrogenation of ethyl, unseen on Cu, while avoiding the decomposition pathways on pure Pt that lead to coking. Furthermore, we confirm the predictions of our theoretical model and experimentally demonstrate that the selectivity of ethyl (de)hydrogenation can be controlled by changing the surface coverage of hydrogen.

6.
ACS Nano ; 14(4): 4682-4688, 2020 Apr 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32186852

RESUMEN

Chiral surfaces are of growing interest for enantioselective adsorption and reactions. While metal surfaces can be prepared with a wide range of chiral surface orientations, chiral oxide surface preparation is more challenging. We demonstrate the chirality of a metal surface can be used to direct the homochiral growth of a thin film chiral oxide. Specifically, we study the chiral "29" copper oxide, formed by oxidizing a Cu(111) single crystal at 650 K. Surface structure spread single crystals, which expose a continuous distribution of surface orientations as a function of position on the crystal, enable us to systematically investigate the mechanism of chirality transfer between the metal and the surface oxide with high-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy. We discover that the local underlying metal facet directs the orientation and chirality of the oxide overlayer. Importantly, single homochiral domains of the "29" oxide were found in areas where the Cu step edges that templated growth were ≤20 nm apart. We use this information to select a Cu(239 241 246) oriented single crystal and demonstrate that a "29" oxide surface can be grown in homochiral domains by templating from the subtle chirality of the underlying metal crystal. This work demonstrates how a small degree of chirality induced by slight misorientation of a metal surface (∼1 sites/20 nm2) can be amplified by oxidation to yield a homochiral oxide with a regular array of chiral oxide pores (∼75 sites/20 nm2). This offers a general approach for making chiral oxide surfaces via oxidation of an appropriately "miscut" metal surface.

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