Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 69
Filtrar
1.
Nature ; 565(7741): 631-635, 2019 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30700869

RESUMEN

Proton-exchange-membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) are attractive next-generation power sources for use in vehicles and other applications1, with development efforts focusing on improving the catalyst system of the fuel cell. One problem is catalyst poisoning by impurity gases such as carbon monoxide (CO), which typically comprises about one per cent of hydrogen fuel2-4. A possible solution is on-board hydrogen purification, which involves preferential oxidation of CO in hydrogen (PROX)3-7. However, this approach is challenging8-15 because the catalyst needs to be active and selective towards CO oxidation over a broad range of low temperatures so that CO is efficiently removed (to below 50 parts per million) during continuous PEMFC operation (at about 353 kelvin) and, in the case of automotive fuel cells, during frequent cold-start periods. Here we show that atomically dispersed iron hydroxide, selectively deposited on silica-supported platinum (Pt) nanoparticles, enables complete and 100 per cent selective CO removal through the PROX reaction over the broad temperature range of 198 to 380 kelvin. We find that the mass-specific activity of this system is about 30 times higher than that of more conventional catalysts consisting of Pt on iron oxide supports. In situ X-ray absorption fine-structure measurements reveal that most of the iron hydroxide exists as Fe1(OH)x clusters anchored on the Pt nanoparticles, with density functional theory calculations indicating that Fe1(OH)x-Pt single interfacial sites can readily react with CO and facilitate oxygen activation. These findings suggest that in addition to strategies that target oxide-supported precious-metal nanoparticles or isolated metal atoms, the deposition of isolated transition-metal complexes offers new ways of designing highly active metal catalysts.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(29): 20391-20400, 2024 Jul 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38987861

RESUMEN

Inspired by enzymatic catalysis, it is crucial to construct hydrogen-bonding-rich microenvironment around catalytic sites; unfortunately, its precise construction and understanding how the distance between such microenvironment and catalytic sites affects the catalysis remain significantly challenging. In this work, a series of metal-organic framework (MOF)-based single-atom Ru1 catalysts, namely, Ru1/UiO-67-X (X = -H, -m-(NH2)2, -o-(NH2)2), have been synthesized, where the distance between the hydrogen-bonding microenvironment and Ru1 sites is modulated by altering the location of amino groups. The -NH2 group can form hydrogen bonds with H2O, constituting a unique microenvironment that causes an increased water concentration around the Ru1 sites. Remarkably, Ru1/UiO-67-o-(NH2)2 displays a superior photocatalytic hydrogen production rate, ∼4.6 and ∼146.6 times of Ru1/UiO-67-m-(NH2)2 and Ru1/UiO-67, respectively. Both experimental and computational results suggest that the close proximity of amino groups to the Ru1 sites in Ru1/UiO-67-o-(NH2)2 improves charge transfer and H2O dissociation, accounting for the promoted photocatalytic hydrogen production.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(12): 6702-6709, 2023 Mar 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36920448

RESUMEN

Reactive metal-support interactions (RMSIs) induce the formation of bimetallic alloys and offer an effective way to tune the electronic and geometric properties of metal sites for advanced catalysis. However, RMSIs often require high-temperature reductions (>500 °C), which significantly limits the tuning of bimetallic compositional varieties. Here, we report that an atomically thick Ga2O3 coating of Pd nanoparticles enables the initiation of RMSIs at a much lower temperature of ∼250 °C. State-of-the-art microscopic and in situ spectroscopic studies disclose that low-temperature RMSIs initiate the formation of rarely reported Ga-rich PdGa alloy phases, distinct from the Pd2Ga phase formed in traditional Pd/Ga2O3 catalysts after high-temperature reduction. In the CO2 hydrogenation reaction, the Ga-rich alloy phases impressively boost the formation of methanol and dimethyl ether ∼5 times higher than that of Pd/Ga2O3. In situ infrared spectroscopy reveals that the Ga-rich phases greatly favor formate formation as well as its subsequent hydrogenation, thus leading to high productivity.

4.
Nano Lett ; 22(24): 10216-10223, 2022 Dec 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36352348

RESUMEN

An efficient catalytic system for nitrogen (N2) photofixation generally consists of light-harvesting units, active sites, and an electron-transfer bridge. In order to track photogenerated electron flow between different functional units, it is highly desired to develop in situ characterization techniques with element-specific capability, surface sensitivity, and detection of unoccupied states. In this work, we developed in situ synchrotron radiation soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy (in situ sXAS) to probe the variation of electronic structure for a reaction system during N2 photoreduction. Nickel single-atom and ceria nanoparticle comodified reduced graphene oxide (CeO2/Ni-G) was designed as a model catalyst. In situ sXAS directly reveals the dynamic interfacial charge transfer of photogenerated electrons under illumination and the consequent charge accumulation at the catalytic active sites for N2 activation. This work provides a powerful tool to monitor the electronic structure evolution of active sites under reaction conditions for photocatalysis and beyond.

5.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(2): e202213365, 2023 Jan 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36396598

RESUMEN

Strong metal-support interactions characteristic of the encapsulation of metal particles by oxide overlayers have been widely observed on large metal nanoparticles, but scarcely occur on small nanoclusters (<2 nm) for which the metal-support interactions remain elusive. Herein, we study the structural evolution of Pt nanoclusters (1.5 nm) supported on anatase TiO2 upon high-temperature H2 reduction. The Pt nanoclusters start to partially evolve into a CsCl-type PtTi intermetallic compound when the reduction temperature reaches 400 °C. Upon 700 °C reduction, the PtTi nanoparticles are exclusively formed and grow epitaxially along the TiO2 (101) crystal faces. The thermodynamics of the formation of PtTi via migration of reduced Ti atoms into Pt cluster is unraveled by theoretical calculations. The thermally stable PtTi intermetallic compound, with single-atom Pt isolated by Ti, exhibits enhanced catalytic activity and promoted catalytic durability for CO oxidation.

6.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(23): e202202330, 2022 Jun 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35322514

RESUMEN

The active site of the industrial Cu/ZnO/Al2 O3 catalyst used in CO2 hydrogenation to methanol has been debated for decades. Grand challenges remain in the characterization of structure, composition, and chemical state, both microscopically and spectroscopically, and complete theoretical calculations are limited when it comes to describing the intrinsic activity of the catalyst over the diverse range of structures that emerge under realistic conditions. Here a series of inverse model catalysts of ZnO on copper hydroxide were prepared where the size of ZnO was precisely tuned from atomically dispersed species to nanoparticles using atomic layer deposition. ZnO decoration boosted methanol formation to a rate of 877 gMeOH kgcat -1 h-1 with ≈80 % selectivity at 493 K. High pressure in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy demonstrated that the atomically dispersed ZnO species are prone to aggregate at oxygen-deficient ZnO ensembles instead of forming CuZn metal alloys. By modeling various potential active structures, density functional theory calculations and microkinetic simulations revealed that ZnO/Cu interfaces with oxygen vacancies, rather than stoichiometric interfaces, Cu and CuZn alloys were essential to catalytic activation.

7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(41): e202211919, 2022 Oct 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35981974

RESUMEN

Regulation of the atom-atom interspaces of dual-atom catalysts is essential to optimize the dual-atom synergy to achieve high activity but remains challenging. Herein, we report an effective strategy to regulate the Pt1 -Ni1 interspace to achieve Pt1 Ni1 dimers and Pt1 +Ni1 heteronuclear dual-single-atom catalysts (HDSACs) by tailoring steric hindrance between metal precursors during synthesis. Spectroscopic characterization reveals obvious electron transfers in Pt1 Ni1 oxo dimers but not in Pt1 +Ni1 HDSAC. In the hydrolysis of ammonia borane (AB), the H2 formation rates show an inverse proportion to the Pt1 -Ni1 interspace. The rate of Pt1 Ni1 dimers is ≈13 and 2 times higher than those of Pt1 and Pt1 +Ni1 HDSAC, manifesting the interspace-dependent synergy. Theoretical calculations reveal that the bridging OH group in Pt1 Ni1 dimers promotes water dissociation, while Pt1 facilitates the cleavage of B-H bonds in AB, which boosts a bifunctional synergy to accelerate H2 production cooperatively.

8.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(45): 18854-18858, 2021 Nov 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34730347

RESUMEN

Controlling the chemical environments of the active metal atom including both coordination number (CN) and local composition (LC) is vital to achieve active and stable single-atom catalysts (SACs), but remains challenging. Here we synthesized a series of supported Pt1 SACs by depositing Pt atoms onto the pretuned anchoring sites on nitrogen-doped carbon using atomic layer deposition. In hydrogenation of para-chloronitrobenzene, the Pt1 SAC with a higher CN about four but less pyridinic nitrogen (Npyri) content exhibits a remarkably high activity along with superior recyclability compared to those with lower CNs and more Npyri. Theoretical calculations reveal that the four-coordinated Pt1 atoms with about 1 eV lower formation energy are more resistant to agglomerations than the three-coordinated ones. Composition-wise decrease of the Pt-Npyri bond upshifts gradually the Pt-5d center, and minimal one Pt-Npyri bond features a high-lying Pt-5d state that largely facilitates H2 dissociation, boosting hydrogenation activity remarkably.

9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(43): 18001-18009, 2021 11 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34694127

RESUMEN

Iridium-based perovskites show promising catalytic activity for oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in acid media, but the iridium mass activity remains low and the active-layer structures have not been identified. Here, we report highly active 1 nm IrOx particles anchored on 9R-BaIrO3 (IrOx/9R-BaIrO3) that are directly synthesized by solution calcination followed by strong acid treatment for the first time. The developed IrOx/9R-BaIrO3 catalyst delivers a high iridium mass activity (168 A gIr-1), about 16 times higher than that of the benchmark acidic OER electrocatalyst IrO2 (10 A gIr-1), and only requires a low overpotential of 230 mV to reach a catalytic current density of 10 mA cm-2geo. Careful scanning transmission electron microscopy, synchrotron radiation-based X-ray absorption spectroscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analyses reveal that, during the electrocatalytic process, the initial 1 nm IrOx nanoparticles/9R-BaIrO3 evolve into amorphous Ir4+OxHy/IrO6 octahedrons and then to amorphous Ir5+Ox/IrO6 octahedrons on the surface. Such high relative content of amorphous Ir5+Ox species derived from trimers of face-sharing IrO6 octahedrons in 9R-BaIrO3 and the enhanced metallic conductivity of the Ir5+Ox/9R-BaIrO3 catalyst are responsible for the excellent acidic OER activity. Our results provide new insights into the surface active-layer structure evolution in perovskite electrocatalysts and demonstrate new approaches for engineering highly active acidic OER nanocatalysts.

10.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(13): 7251-7258, 2021 Mar 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33400363

RESUMEN

Single-atom-layer catalysts with fully activated basal-atoms will provide a solution to the low loading-density bottleneck of single-atom catalysts. Herein, we activate the majority of the basal sites of monolayer MoS2 , by doping Co ions to induce long-range ferromagnetic order. This strategy, as revealed by in situ synchrotron radiation microscopic infrared spectroscopy and electrochemical measurements, could activate more than 50 % of the originally inert basal-plane S atoms in the ferromagnetic monolayer for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). Consequently, on a single monolayer of ferromagnetic MoS2 measured by on-chip micro-cell, a current density of 10 mA cm-2 could be achieved at the overpotential of 137 mV, corresponding to a mass activity of 28, 571 Ag-1 , which is two orders of magnitude higher than the multilayer counterpart. Its exchange current density of 75 µA cm-2 also surpasses most other MoS2 -based catalysts. Experimental results and theoretical calculations show the activation of basal plane S atoms arises from an increase of electronic density around the Fermi level, promoting the H adsorption ability of basal-plane S atoms.

11.
Small ; 16(52): e2005571, 2020 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33258310

RESUMEN

Planar metal clusters possess high metal utilization, distinct electronic properties, and catalytic functions from their 3D counterparts. However, synthesis of these materials is challenging due to much elevated surface free energies. Here it is reported that silica supported planar bilayer Pt-CoOx subnano clusters, consisting of approximately one atomic layer of Pt and one CoOx layer on top, can be achieved by employing strong-electrostatic interactions during impregnation and precisely-controlled CoOx coating using atomic layer deposition. Such bilayer structure is unambiguously confirmed by electron microscopy and in situ X-ray absorption fine spectroscopy which is never reported before. This synthetic approach can be extended to another eight permutations of planar metal-oxide subnano clusters. The resulting bilayer catalysts, owing to unique electronic properties and the abundant metal-oxide interfaces created, exhibit excellent catalytic performances in the reactions of preferential oxidation of CO in H2 and selective hydrogenation of acetylene, by showing much higher selectivity and intrinsic activities at least 8 and 48 times greater than those conventional oxide coated 3D metal clusters/nanoparticles, highlighting the advances of bilayer interfacial structure. These findings open a new avenue to design abundant and highly active metal-oxide interfaces for advanced metal catalysis.

12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(37): 14515-14519, 2019 Sep 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31476119

RESUMEN

Developing an active and stable metal single-atom catalyst (SAC) is challenging due to the high surface free energy of metal atoms. In this work, we report that tailoring of the 5d state of Pt1 single atoms on Co3O4 through strong electronic metal-support interactions (EMSIs) boosts the activity up to 68-fold higher than those on other supports in dehydrogenation of ammonia borane for room-temperature hydrogen generation. More importantly, this catalyst also exhibits excellent stability against sintering and leaching, in sharp contrast to the rapid deactivation observed on other Pt single-atom and nanoparticle catalysts. Detailed spectroscopic characterization and theoretical calculations revealed that the EMSI tailors the unoccupied 5d state of Pt1 single atoms, which modulates the adsorption of ammonia borane and facilities hydrogen desorption, thus leading to the high activity. Such extraordinary electronic promotion was further demonstrated on Pd1/Co3O4 and in hydrogenation reactions, providing a new promising way to design advanced SACs with high activity and stability.

13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(8): 3021-3026, 2017 03 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28191942

RESUMEN

Direct and efficient photocatalytic water splitting is critical for sustainable conversion and storage of renewable solar energy. Here, we propose a conceptual design of two-dimensional C3N4-based in-plane heterostructure to achieve fast spatial transfer of photoexcited electrons for realizing highly efficient and spontaneous overall water splitting. This unique plane heterostructural carbon ring (Cring)-C3N4 nanosheet can synchronously expedite electron-hole pair separation and promote photoelectron transport through the local in-plane π-conjugated electric field, synergistically elongating the photocarrier diffusion length and lifetime by 10 times relative to those achieved with pristine g-C3N4. As a result, the in-plane (Cring)-C3N4 heterostructure could efficiently split pure water under light irradiation with prominent H2 production rate up to 371 µmol g-1 h-1 and a notable quantum yield of 5% at 420 nm.

14.
Small ; 13(39)2017 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28834215

RESUMEN

Doping atomically thick nanosheets is a great challenge due to the self-purification effect that drives the precipitation of dopants. Here, a breakthrough is made to dope Mn atoms substitutionally into MoS2 nanosheets in a sulfur-rich supercritical hydrothermal reaction environment, where the formation energy of Mn substituting for Mo sites in MoS2 is significantly reduced to overcome the self-purification effect. The substitutional Mn doping is convincingly evidenced by high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy and X-ray absorption fine spectroscopy characterizations. The Mn-doped MoS2 nanosheets show robust intrinsic ferromagnetic response with a saturation magnetic moment of 0.05 µB Mn-1 at room temperature. The intrinsic ferromagnetism is further confirmed by the reversibility of the magnetic behavior during the cycle of incorporating/removing Li codopants, showing the critical role of Mn 3d electronic states in mediating the magnetic interactions in MoS2 nanosheets.

15.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 18(23): 15927-33, 2016 Jun 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27241025

RESUMEN

Removing surfactants from a colloidal metal nanoparticle surface is necessary for their realistic applications, and how they could be stripped is a subject of active investigation. Here, we report a solvent-induced desorption of dodecanethiol ligands from the gold nanoparticle surface, and traced this desorption process using a combination of in situ X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) and Raman spectroscopic techniques. In situ analysis results reveal that the solvent exchange of ethanol with tetrahydrofuran (THF) can effectively remove dodecanethiol ligands while keeping the particle morphology unchanged. Upon increasing the THF/ethanol ratio from 0 : 1 to 5 : 1, the surface coverage of thiol on the Au surface is reduced from 0.47 to 0.07, suggesting the depletion of ligands first from the nanoparticle facet sites, then from the edge sites, while the ligands at the corner sites are intact. This work enriches our knowledge on surfactant removal and may pave the way towards preparing surface-clean nanoparticles for practical applications.

16.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 55(6): 2137-41, 2016 Feb 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26732536

RESUMEN

The facile electron-hole pair recombination in earth-abundant transition-metal oxides is a major limitation for the development of highly efficient hydrogen evolution photocatalysts. In this work, the thickness of a layered ß-CoOOH semiconductor that contains metal/hydroxy groups was reduced to obtain an atomically thin, two-dimensional nanostructure. Analysis by ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy revealed that electron-hole recombination is almost suppressed in the as-prepared 1.3 nm thick ß-CoOOH nanosheet, which leads to prominent electron-hole separation efficiencies of 60-90 % upon irradiation at 350-450 nm, which are ten times higher than those of the bulk counterpart. X-ray absorption spectroscopy and first-principles calculations demonstrate that [HO-CoO6-x] species on the nanosheet surface promote H(+) adsorption and H2 desorption. An aqueous suspension of the ß-CoOOH nanosheets exhibited a high hydrogen production rate of 160 µmol g(-1) h(-1) even when the system was operated for hundreds of hours.

17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(7): 2622-7, 2015 Feb 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25641111

RESUMEN

Outstanding magnetic properties are highly desired for two-dimensional ultrathin semiconductor nanosheets. Here, we propose a phase incorporation strategy to induce robust room-temperature ferromagnetism in a nonmagnetic MoS2 semiconductor. A two-step hydrothermal method was used to intentionally introduce sulfur vacancies in a 2H-MoS2 ultrathin nanosheet host, which prompts the transformation of the surrounding 2H-MoS2 local lattice into a trigonal (1T-MoS2) phase. 25% 1T-MoS2 phase incorporation in 2H-MoS2 nanosheets can enhance the electron carrier concentration by an order, introduce a Mo(4+) 4d energy state within the bandgap, and create a robust intrinsic ferromagnetic response of 0.25 µB/Mo by the exchange interactions between sulfur vacancy and the Mo(4+) 4d bandgap state at room temperature. This design opens up new possibility for effective manipulation of exchange interactions in two-dimensional nanostructures.

18.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 54(30): 8722-7, 2015 Jul 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26094612

RESUMEN

Endowing transition-metal oxide electrocatalysts with high water oxidation activity is greatly desired for production of clean and sustainable chemical fuels. Here, we present an atomically thin cobalt oxyhydroxide (γ-CoOOH) nanosheet as an efficient electrocatalyst for water oxidation. The 1.4 nm thick γ-CoOOH nanosheet electrocatalyst can effectively oxidize water with extraordinarily large mass activities of 66.6 A g(-1), 20 times higher than that of γ-CoOOH bulk and 2.4 times higher than that of the benchmarking IrO2 electrocatalyst. Experimental characterizations and first-principles calculations provide solid evidence to the half-metallic nature of the as-prepared nanosheets with local structure distortion of the surface CoO(6-x) octahedron. This greatly enhances the electrophilicity of H2O and facilitates the interfacial electron transfer between Co ions and adsorbed -OOH species to form O2, resulting in the high electrocatalytic activity of layered CoOOH for water oxidation.

19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(29): 10393-8, 2014 Jul 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25004398

RESUMEN

The synthesis of atomically thin transition-metal oxide nanosheets as a conceptually new class of materials is significant for the development of next-generation electronic and magnetic nanodevices but remains a fundamental chemical and physical challenge. Here, based on a "template-assisted oriented growth" strategy, we successfully synthesized half-unit-cell nanosheets of a typical transition-metal oxide α-Fe2O3 that show robust intrinsic ferromagnetism of 0.6 µB/atom at 100 K and remain ferromagnetic at room temperature. A unique surface structure distortion, as revealed by X-ray absorption spectroscopy, produces nonidentical Fe ion environments and induces distance fluctuation of Fe ion chains. First-principles calculations reveal that the efficient breaking of the quantum degeneracy of Fe 3d energy states activates ferromagnetic exchange interaction in these Fe(5-co)-O-Fe(6-co) ion chains. These results provide a solid design principle for tailoring the spin-exchange interactions and offer promise for future semiconductor spintronics.

20.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(3): 1150-5, 2014 Jan 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24405052

RESUMEN

Manipulating the ferromagnetic interactions in diluted magnetic semiconductor quantum dots (DMSQDs) is a central theme to the development of next-generation spin-based information technologies, but this remains a great challenge because of the intrinsic antiferromagnetic coupling between impurity ions therein. Here, we propose an effective approach capable of activating ferromagnetic exchange in ZnO-based DMSQDs, by virtue of a core/shell structure that engineers the energy level of the magnetic impurity 3d levels relative to the band edge. This idea has been successfully applied to Zn(0.96)Co(0.04)O DMSQDs covered by a shell of ZnS or Ag2S. First-principles calculations further indicate that covering a ZnS shell around the Co-doped ZnO core drives a transition of antiferromagnetic-to-ferromagnetic interaction, which occurs within an effective depth of 1.2 nm underneath the surface in the core. This design opens up new possibility for effective manipulation of exchange interactions in doped oxide nanostructures for future spintronics applications.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA