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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(22): e2120716119, 2022 05 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35605120

RESUMO

SignificanceFor oxide catalysts, it is important to elucidate and further control their atomic structures. In this work, well-defined CrO2 bilayer islands and Cr2O7 dinuclear clusters have been grown on Au(111) and unambiguously identified by scanning tunneling microscopy and theoretical calculations. Upon cycled redox treatments, the two kinds of oxide nanostructures can be reversibly transformed. It is interesting to note that both Cr oxides do not exist in bulk but need to be stabilized by the metal surface and the specific environment. Our results suggest that both redox atmosphere and interface confinement effects can be used to construct an oxide nanostructure with the specific chemical state and structure.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(8): 5523-5531, 2024 Feb 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38367215

RESUMO

An enclosed nanospace often shows a significant confinement effect on chemistry within its inner cavity, while whether an open space can have this effect remains elusive. Here, we show that the open surface of TiO2 creates a confined environment for In2O3 which drives spontaneous transformation of free In2O3 nanoparticles in physical contact with TiO2 nanoparticles into In oxide (InOx) nanolayers covering onto the TiO2 surface during CO2 hydrogenation to CO. The formed InOx nanolayers are easy to create surface oxygen vacancies but are against over-reduction to metallic In in the H2-rich atmospheres, which thus show significantly enhanced activity and stability in comparison with the pure In2O3 catalyst. The formation of interfacial In-O-Ti bonding is identified to drive the In2O3 dispersion and stabilize the metastable InOx layers. The InOx overlayers with distinct chemistry from their free counterpart can be confined on various oxide surfaces, demonstrating the important confinement effect at oxide/oxide interfaces.

3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(5): e202316888, 2024 Jan 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38078622

RESUMO

Supported metal catalysts are widely used for chemical conversion, in which construction of high density metal-oxide or oxide-metal interface is an important means to improve their reaction performance. Here, Cu@ZnOx encapsulation structure has been in situ constructed through gas-phase migration of Zn species from ZnO particles onto surface of Cu nanoparticles under CO2 hydrogenation atmosphere at 450 °C. The gas-phase deposition of Zn species onto the Cu surface and growth of ZnOx overlayer is self-limited under the high temperature and redox gas (CO2 /H2 ) conditions. Accordingly, high density ZnOx -Cu interface sites can be effectively tailored to have an enhanced activity in CO2 hydrogenation to methanol. This work reveals a new route for the construction of active oxide-metal interface and classic strong metal-support interaction state through gas-phase migration of support species induced by high temperature redox reaction atmosphere.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(31): 17056-17065, 2023 Aug 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37493082

RESUMO

Supported oxides are widely used in many important catalytic reactions, in which the interaction between the oxide catalyst and oxide support is critical but still remains elusive. Here, we construct a chemically bonded oxide-oxide interface by chemical deposition of Co3O4 onto ZnO powder (Co3O4/ZnO), in which complete reduction of Co3O4 to Co0 has been strongly impeded. It was revealed that the local interfacial confinement effect between Co oxide and the ZnO support helps to maintain a metastable CoOx state in CO2 hydrogenation reaction, producing 93% CO. In contrast, a physically contacted oxide-oxide interface was formed by mechanically mixing Co3O4 and ZnO powders (Co3O4-ZnO), in which reduction of Co3O4 to Co0 was significantly promoted, demonstrating a quick increase of CO2 conversion to 45% and a high selectivity toward CH4 (92%) in the CO2 hydrogenation reaction. This interface effect is ascribed to unusual remote spillover of dissociated hydrogen species from ZnO nanoparticles to the neighboring Co oxide nanoparticles. This work clearly illustrates the equally important but opposite local and remote effects at the oxide-oxide interfaces. The distinct oxide-oxide interactions contribute to many diverse interface phenomena in oxide-oxide catalytic systems.

5.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(29): 20121-20127, 2023 Jul 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37462941

RESUMO

Tuning an oxide/metal interface is of critical importance for the performance enhancement of many heterogeneous catalytic reactions. However, catalytic oxidation occurring at the interface between non-reducible oxide and metal has been challenging, since non-reducible oxides hardly lose their lattice oxygen (OL) or dissociate O2 from the gas phase. In this work, a ZnO monolayer film on Au(111) is used as an inverse catalyst to investigate CO oxidation occurring at the ZnO/Au(111) interface via high pressure scanning tunneling microscopy. Surface science experiments indicate that oxygen intercalation under the ZnO monolayer film, termed ZnO/O/Au(111), can be achieved via a surface reaction with 1 × 10-6 mbar O3. Subsequent exposure of the formed ZnO/O/Au(111) surface to mbar CO at room temperature leads to the recovery of the pristine ZnO/Au(111) surface. Theoretical calculations reveal that OL adjacent to intercalated oxygen (Oint) is activated due to the OL-Zn-Oint bonding and surface corrugation, which can be directly involved in CO oxidation. Subsequently, Oint migrates to the formed oxygen vacancy from the subsurface resuming the pristine ZnO structure. These results thus reveal that oxygen intercalation underneath single-layer ZnO will strongly boost the oxidation reaction via activating adjacent lattice oxygen atoms.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(11): 4874-4882, 2022 Mar 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35258951

RESUMO

Encapsulation of metal nanoparticles by support-derived materials known as the classical strong metal-support interaction (SMSI) often happens upon thermal treatment of supported metal catalysts at high temperatures (≥500 °C) and consequently lowers the catalytic performance due to blockage of metal active sites. Here, we show that this SMSI state can be constructed in a Ru-MoO3 catalyst using CO2 hydrogenation reaction gas and at a low temperature of 250 °C, which favors the selective CO2 hydrogenation to CO. During the reaction, Ru nanoparticles facilitate reduction of MoO3 to generate active MoO3-x overlayers with oxygen vacancies, which migrate onto Ru nanoparticles' surface and form the encapsulated structure, that is, Ru@MoO3-x. The formed SMSI state changes 100% CH4 selectivity on fresh Ru particle surfaces to above 99.0% CO selectivity with excellent activity and long-term catalytic stability. The encapsulating oxide layers can be removed via O2 treatment, switching back completely to the methanation. This work suggests that the encapsulation of metal nanocatalysts can be dynamically generated in real reactions, which helps to gain the target products with high activity.

7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(26): 11540-11549, 2020 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32492329

RESUMO

Modulating lattice oxygen in metal oxides that conducts partial oxidation of methane in balancing C-H activation and syngas selectivity remains challenging. This paper describes the discovery of distorting FeO6 octahedra in La1-xCexFeO3 (x = 0, 0.25 0.5, 0.75, 1) orthorhombic perovskites for the promotion of lattice oxygen activation. By combined electrical conductivity relaxation measurements and density functional theory calculations studies, this paper describes the enhancement of FeO6 octahedral distortion in La1-xCexFeO3 promoting their bulk oxygen mobility and surface oxygen exchange capability. Consequently, La0.5Ce0.5FeO3 with the highest FeO6 distortion achieves exceptional syngas productivity of ∼3 and 8 times higher than LaFeO3 and CeFeO3, respectively, in CH4 partial oxidation step with simultaneous high CO2 conversion (92%) in the CO2-splitting step at 850 °C. The results exemplify the feasibility to tailor the active lattice oxygen of perovskite by modulating the distortion of BO6 in ABO3, which ultimately influences their reaction performance in chemical looping processes.

8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(8): 1801-1805, 2017 02 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28167775

RESUMO

Understanding adsorbed water and its dissociation to surface hydroxyls on oxide surfaces is key to unraveling many physical and chemical processes, yet the barrier for its deprotonation has never been measured. In this study, we present direct evidence for water dissociation equilibrium on rutile-TiO2(110) by combining supersonic molecular beam, scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), and ab initio molecular dynamics. We measure the deprotonation/protonation barriers of 0.36 eV and find that molecularly bound water is preferred over the surface-bound hydroxyls by only 0.035 eV. We demonstrate that long-range electrostatic fields emanating from the oxide lead to steering and reorientation of the molecules approaching the surface, activating the O-H bonds and inducing deprotonation. The developed methodology for studying metastable reaction intermediates prepared with a high-energy molecular beam in the STM can be readily extended to other systems to clarify a wide range of important bond activation processes.

9.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(49): 22072-22079, 2020 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32833255

RESUMO

Chemical looping provides an energy- and cost-effective route for alkane utilization. However, there is considerable CO2 co-production caused by kinetically mismatched O2- bulk diffusion and surface reaction in current chemical looping oxidative dehydrogenation systems, rendering a decreased olefin productivity. Sub-monolayer or monolayer vanadia nanostructures are successfully constructed to suppress CO2 production in oxidative dehydrogenation of propane by evading the interference of O2- bulk diffusion (monolayer versus multi-layers). The highly dispersed vanadia nanostructures on titanium dioxide support showed over 90 % propylene selectivity at 500 °C, exhibiting turnover frequency of 1.9×10-2  s-1 , which is over 20 times greater than that of conventional crystalline V2 O5 . Combining in situ spectroscopic characterizations and DFT calculations, we reveal the loading-reaction barrier relationship through the vanadia/titanium interfacial interaction.

10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(47): 18653-18657, 2019 Nov 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31703164

RESUMO

Oxygen chemistry plays a pivotal role in numerous chemical reactions. In particular, selective cleavage of C-H bonds by metal oxo species is highly desirable in dehydrogenation of light alkanes. However, high selectivity of alkene is usually hampered through consecutive oxygenation reactions in a conventional oxidative dehydrogenation (ODH) scheme. Herein, we show that dual-functional Mo-V-O mixed oxides selectively convert propane to propylene via an alternative chemical looping oxidative dehydrogenation (CL-ODH) approach. At 500 °C, we obtain 89% propylene selectivity at 36% propane conversion over 100 dehydrogenation-regeneration cycles. We attribute such high propylene yield-which exceeds that of previously reported ODH catalysts-to the involvement and precise modulation of bulk lattice oxygen via atomic-scale doping of Mo and show that increasing the binding energy of V-O bonds is critical to enhance the selectivity of propylene. This work provides the fundamental understanding of metal-oxygen chemistry and a promising strategy for alkane dehydrogenation.

11.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 58(23): 7668-7672, 2019 Jun 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30958620

RESUMO

The search for efficient nontoxic catalysts able to perform industrial hydrogenations is a topic of interest, with relevance to many catalytic processes. Herein, we describe a mechanistic phenomenon for the activation and spillover of hydrogen for remarkable selectivity in the semi-hydrogenation of acetylene over sub-1 nm Pd nanoclusters confined within sodalite (SOD) zeolite (Pd@SOD). Specifically, hydrogen is dissociated on the Pd nanoclusters to form hydrogen species (i.e., hydrogen atoms and hydroxyl groups) that spill over the SOD surfaces. The design and utilization of the small-pore zeolite SOD (six-membered rings with 0.28×0.28 nm channels) is crucial as it only allows H2 diffusion into the channels to reach the encapsulated Pd nanoclusters and thus avoids over-hydrogenation to form ethane. Pd@SOD exhibits an ethylene selectivity of over 94.5 %, while that of conventional Pd/SOD is approximately 21.5 %.

12.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 58(33): 11242-11247, 2019 Aug 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31132201

RESUMO

Identification of the active structure under reaction conditions is of great importance for the rational design of heterogeneous catalysts. However, this is often hampered by their structural complexity. The interplay between the surface structure of Co3 O4 and the CO2 hydrogenation is described. Co3 O4 with morphology-dependent crystallographic surfaces presents different reducibility and formation energy of oxygen vacancies, thus resulting in distinct steady-state composition and product selectivity. Co3 O4 -0 h rhombic dodecahedra were completely reduced to Co0 and CoO, which presents circa 85 % CH4 selectivity. In contrast, Co3 O4 -2 h nanorods were partially reduced to CoO, which exhibits a circa 95 % CO selectivity. The crucial role of the Co3 O4 structure in determining the catalytic performance for higher alcohol synthesis over CuCo-based catalysts is demonstrated. As expected, Cu/Co3 O4 -2 h shows nine-fold higher ethanol yield than Cu/Co3 O4 -0 h owing to the inhibition for methanation.

13.
Chem Soc Rev ; 46(7): 1785-1806, 2017 Apr 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28180223

RESUMO

Understanding water/solid interactions is of great importance in a variety of fundamental and technological processes, such as photocatalytic water splitting, heterogeneous catalysis, electrochemistry, and corrosion. This review describes recent advancements in the molecular-level understanding of water adsorption, dissociation and clustering on model surfaces of metal oxides, achieved primarily by combining scanning probe microscopies with ensemble-averaged techniques and density functional theory calculations. Factors controlling how water binds and clusters on the coordinatively unsaturated metal cations of different oxide surfaces are discussed. We start by reviewing the fundamental differences in the relative stability of molecularly and dissociatively-bonded water monomers and clusters on isostructural rutile TiO2(110) and RuO2(110) surfaces and on different surfaces and polymorphs of TiO2. We further discuss how oxide interfaces (both exposed and buried) with metals affect water dissociation. Subsequently, we focus on high coverage water overlayers such as one-dimensional water chain structures that result from different substrate morphologies, and water monolayer structures. We conclude with novel studies of interfacial water in liquids.

14.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 57(23): 6791-6795, 2018 06 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29517847

RESUMO

Supported vanadium oxides are one of the most promising alternative catalysts for propane dehydrogenation (PDH) and efforts have been made to improve its catalytic performance. However, unlike Pt-based catalysts, the nature of the active site and surface structure of the supported vanadium catalysts under reductive reaction conditions still remain elusive. This paper describes the surface structure and the important role of surface-bound hydroxyl groups on VOx / γ-Al2 O3 catalysts under reaction conditions employing in situ DRIFTS experiments and DFT calculations. It is shown that hydroxyl groups on the VOx /Al2 O3 catalyst (V-OH) are produced under H2 pre-reduction, and the catalytic performance for PDH is closely connected to the concentration of V-OH species on the catalyst. The hydroxyl groups are found to improve the catalyst that leads to better stability by suppressing the coke deposition.

15.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 57(26): 7724-7728, 2018 06 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29673029

RESUMO

Carbon dioxide (CO2 ) reduction in aqueous solutions is an attractive strategy for carbon capture and utilization. Cuprous oxide (Cu2 O) is a promising catalyst for CO2 reduction as it can convert CO2 into valuable hydrocarbons and suppress the side hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, the nature of the active sites in Cu2 O remains under debate because of the complex surface structure of Cu2 O under reducing conditions, leading to limited guidance in designing improved Cu2 O catalysts. This paper describes the functionality of surface-bonded hydroxy groups on partially reduced Cu2 O(111) for the CO2 reduction reaction (CO2 RR) by combined density functional theory (DFT) calculations and experimental studies. We find that the surface hydroxy groups play a crucial role in the CO2 RR and HER, and a moderate coverage of hydroxy groups is optimal for promotion of the CO2 RR and suppression of the HER simultaneously. Electronic structure analysis indicates that the charge transfer from hydroxy groups to coordination-unsaturated Cu (CuCUS ) sites stabilizes surface-adsorbed COOH*, which is a key intermediate during the CO2 RR. Moreover, the CO2 RR was evaluated over Cu2 O octahedral catalysts with {111} facets and different surface coverages of hydroxy groups, which demonstrates that Cu2 O octahedra with moderate coverage of hydroxy groups can indeed enhance the CO2 RR and suppress the HER.

16.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 57(47): 15415-15419, 2018 Nov 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30329205

RESUMO

Artificial photosynthesis can be used to store solar energy and reduce CO2 into fuels to potentially alleviate global warming and the energy crisis. Compared to the generation of gaseous products, it remains a great challenge to tune the product distribution of artificial photosynthesis to liquid fuels, such as CH3 OH, which are suitable for storage and transport. Herein, we describe the introduction of metallic Cu nanoparticles (NPs) on Cu2 O films to change the product distribution from gaseous products on bare Cu2 O to predominantly CH3 OH by CO2 reduction in aqueous solutions. The specifically designed Cu/Cu2 O interfaces balance the binding strengths of H* and CO* intermediates, which play critical roles in CH3 OH production. With a TiO2 model photoanode to construct a photoelectrochemical cell, a Cu/Cu2 O dark cathode exhibited a Faradaic efficiency of up to 53.6 % for CH3 OH production. This work demonstrates the feasibility and mechanism of interface engineering to enhance the CH3 OH production from CO2 reduction in aqueous electrolytes.

17.
Langmuir ; 33(35): 8700-8706, 2017 09 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28457131

RESUMO

CO poisoning is a major problem for Pt-based catalysts in various catalytic processes. Thus, the prediction of CO binding energies over Pt alloy surfaces is fundamentally important to evaluate their CO poisoning tolerance. This article describes the effect of surface and subsurface coordination environments on the CO binding strength over PtCu alloy surfaces by employing density functional theory calculations. We show that the existence of surface Pt neighbors weakens the CO binding strength on Pt, whereas the subsurface Pt neighbors play the opposite role. Crystal orbital Hamilton population analysis suggests a stronger antibonding interaction for the Ptsurface-Ptsubsurface bond than for the Ptsurface-Ptsurface bond, which indicates less stable subsurface Pt atoms that hence generate an activated surface Pt that attracts CO more strongly. On the basis of the calculated CO binding energies, an empirical formula, with Pt-Pt coordination numbers as the variables, has been fitted to achieve a fast prediction of CO binding energy over PtCu alloy surfaces.

18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(48): 17023-8, 2014 Dec 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25404332

RESUMO

Graphitic overlayers on metals have commonly been considered as inhibitors for surface reactions due to their chemical inertness and physical blockage of surface active sites. In this work, however, we find that surface reactions, for instance, CO adsorption/desorption and CO oxidation, can take place on Pt(111) surface covered by monolayer graphene sheets. Surface science measurements combined with density functional calculations show that the graphene overlayer weakens the strong interaction between CO and Pt and, consequently, facilitates the CO oxidation with lower apparent activation energy. These results suggest that interfaces between graphitic overlayers and metal surfaces act as 2D confined nanoreactors, in which catalytic reactions are promoted. The finding contrasts with the conventional knowledge that graphitic carbon poisons a catalyst surface but opens up an avenue to enhance catalytic performance through coating of metal catalysts with controlled graphitic covers.


Assuntos
Monóxido de Carbono/química , Grafite/química , Nanopartículas Metálicas/química , Metais/química , Adsorção , Dióxido de Carbono/química , Catálise , Cinética , Oxirredução , Oxigênio/química , Tamanho da Partícula , Platina/química , Propriedades de Superfície , Temperatura
19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(28): 8714-7, 2016 07 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27390889

RESUMO

The coordination of H2 to a metal center via polarization of its σ bond electron density, known as a Kubas complex, is the means by which H2 chemisorbs at Ru(4+) sites on the rutile RuO2(110) surface. This distortion of electron density off an interatomic axis is often described as a 'banana-bond.' We show that the Ru-H2 banana-bond can be destabilized and split using visible light. Photodesorption of H2 (or D2) is evident by mass spectrometry and scanning tunneling microscopy. From time-dependent density functional theory, the key optical excitation splitting the Ru-H2 complex involves an interband transition in RuO2 which effectively diminishes its Lewis acidity, thereby weakening the Kubas complex. Such excitations are not expected to affect adsorbates on RuO2 given its metallic properties. Therefore, this common thermal cocatalyst employed in photocatalysis is, itself, photoactive.

20.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3100, 2024 Apr 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38600159

RESUMO

In heterogeneous catalysis catalyst activation is often observed during the reaction process, which is mostly attributed to the induction by reactants. In this work we report that surface structure of molybdenum nitride (MoNx) catalyst exhibits a high dependency on the partial pressure or concentration of reaction products i.e., CO and H2O in reverse water gas-shift reaction (RWGS) (CO2:H2 = 1:3) but not reactants of CO2 and H2. Molybdenum oxide (MoOx) overlayers formed by oxidation with H2O are observed at reaction pressure below 10 mbar or with low partial pressure of CO/H2O products, while CO-induced surface carbonization happens at reaction pressure above 100 mbar and with high partial pressure of CO/H2O products. The reaction products induce restructuring of MoNx surface into more active molybdenum carbide (MoCx) to increase the reaction rate and make for higher partial pressure CO, which in turn promote further surface carbonization of MoNx. We refer to this as the positive feedback between catalytic activity and catalyst activation in RWGS, which should be widely present in heterogeneous catalysis.

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