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1.
ACS Nano ; 18(1): 178-185, 2024 Jan 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38117704

RESUMO

Core@shell nanoparticles (NPs) have been widely explored to enhance catalysis due to the synergistic effects introduced by their nanoscale interface and surface structures. However, creating a catalytically functional core@shell structure is often a synthetic challenge due to the need to control the shell thickness. Here, we report a one-step synthetic approach to core-shell CuPd@Pd NPs with an intermetallic B2-CuPd core and a thin (∼0.6 nm) Pd shell. This core@shell structure shows enhanced activity toward selective hydrogenation of Ar-NO2 and allows one-pot tandem hydrogenation of Ar-NO2 to Ar-NH2 and its condensation with Ar-CHO to form Ar-N═CH-Ar. DFT calculations indicate that the B2-CuPd core promotes the Pd shell binding to Ar-NO2 more strongly than to Ar-CHO, thereby selectively activating Ar-NO2. The chemoselective catalysis demonstrated by B2-CuPd@Pd can be extended to a broader scope of substrates, allowing green chemistry synthesis of a wide range of functional chemicals and materials.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(34): 19076-19085, 2023 Aug 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37606196

RESUMO

Efficient C-C bond cleavage and oxidation of alcohols to CO2 is the key to developing highly efficient alcohol fuel cells for renewable energy applications. In this work, we report the synthesis of core/shell Au/Pt nanowires (NWs) with stepped Pt clusters deposited along the ultrathin (2.3 nm) stepped Au NWs as an active catalyst to effectively oxidize alcohols to CO2. The catalytic oxidation reaction is dependent on the Au/Pt ratios, and the Au1.0/Pt0.2 NWs have the largest percentage (∼75%) of stepped Au/Pt sites and show the highest activity for ethanol electro-oxidation, reaching an unprecedented 196.9 A/mgPt (32.5 A/mgPt+Au). This NW catalyst is also active in catalyzing the oxidation of other primary alcohols, such as methanol, n-propanol, and ethylene glycol. In situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy and infrared spectroscopy are used to characterize the catalyst structure and to identify key reaction intermediates, providing concrete evidence that the synergy between the low-coordinated Pt sites and the stepped Au NWs is essential to catalyze the alcohol oxidation reaction, which is further supported by DFT calculations that the C-C bond cleavage is indeed enhanced on the undercoordinated Pt-Au surface. Our study provides important evidence that a core/shell structure with stepped core/shell sites is essential to enhance electrochemical oxidation of alcohols and will also be central to understanding electro-oxidation reactions and to the future development of highly efficient direct alcohol fuel cells for renewable energy applications.

3.
Acc Chem Res ; 56(12): 1591-1601, 2023 Jun 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37205747

RESUMO

ConspectusFunctional nanoparticles (NPs) have been studied extensively in the past decades for their unique nanoscale properties and their promising applications in advanced nanosciences and nanotechnologies. One critical component of studying these NPs is to prepare monodisperse NPs so that their physical and chemical properties can be tuned and optimized. Solution phase reactions have provided the most reliable processes for fabricating such monodisperse NPs in which metal-ligand interactions play essential roles in the synthetic controls. These interactions are also key to stabilizing the preformed NPs for them to show the desired electronic, magnetic, photonic, and catalytic properties. In this Account, we summarize some representative organic bipolar ligands that have recently been explored to control NP formation and NP functions. These include aliphatic acids, alkylphosphonic acids, alkylamines, alkylphosphines, and alkylthiols. This ligand group covers metal-ligand interactions via covalent, coordination, and electrostatic bonds that are most commonly employed to control NP sizes, compositions, shapes, and properties. The metal-ligand bonding effects on NP nucleation rate and growth can now be more thoroughly investigated by in situ spectroscopic and theoretical studies. In general, to obtain the desired NP size and monodispersity requires rational control of the metal/ligand ratios, concentrations, and reaction temperatures in the synthetic solutions. In addition, for multicomponent NPs, the binding strength of ligands to various metal surfaces needs to be considered in order to prepare these NPs with predesigned compositions. The selective ligand binding onto certain facets of NPs is also key to anisotropic growth of NPs, as demonstrated in the synthesis of one-dimensional nanorods and nanowires. The effects of metal-ligand interactions on NP functions are discussed in two aspects, electrochemical catalysis for CO2 reduction and electronic transport across NP assemblies. We first highlight recent advances in using surface ligands to promote the electrochemical reduction of CO2. Several mechanisms are discussed, including the modification of the catalyst surface environment, electron transfer through the metal-organic interface, and stabilization of the CO2 reduction intermediates, all of which facilitate selective CO2 reduction. These strategies lead to better understanding of molecular level control of catalysis for further catalyst optimization. Metal-ligand interaction in magnetic NPs can also be used to control tunneling magnetoresistance properties across NPs in NP assemblies by tuning NP interparticle spacing and surface spin polarization. In all, metal-ligand interactions have yielded particularly promising directions for tuning CO2 reduction selectivity and for optimizing nanoelectronics, and the concepts can certainly be extended to rationalize NP engineering at atomic/molecular precision for the fabrication of sensitive functional devices that will be critical for many nanotechnological applications.

4.
Nanoscale ; 14(16): 6162-6170, 2022 Apr 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35388863

RESUMO

We report the synthesis of Cu2O nanoparticles (NPs) by controlled oxidation of Cu NPs and the study of these NPs as a robust catalyst for ammonia borane dehydrogenation, nitroarene hydrogenation, and amine/aldehyde condensation into Schiff-base compounds. Upon investigation of the size-dependent catalysis for ammonia borane dehydrogenation and nitroarene hydrogenation using 8-18 nm Cu2O NPs, we found 13 nm Cu2O NPs to be especially active with quantitative conversion of nitro groups to amines. The 13 nm Cu2O NPs also efficiently catalyze tandem reactions of ammonia borane, diisopropoxy-dinitrobenzene, and terephthalaldehyde, leading to a controlled polymerization and the facile synthesis of polybenzoxazole (PBO). The highly pure PBO (Mw = 19 kDa) shows much enhanced chemical stability than the commercial PBO against hydrolysis in boiling water or simulated seawater, demonstrating a great potential of using noble metal-free catalysts for green chemistry synthesis of PBO as a robust lightweight structural material for thermally and mechanically demanding applications.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(4): 2115-2122, 2021 02 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33493397

RESUMO

Enabling catalysts to promote multistep chemical reactions in a tandem fashion is an exciting new direction for the green chemistry synthesis of materials. Nanoparticle (NP) catalysts are particularly well suited for tandem reactions due to the diverse surface-active sites they offer. Here, we report that AuPd alloy NPs, especially 3.7 nm Au42Pd58 NPs, catalyze one-pot reactions of formic acid, diisopropoxy-dinitrobenzene, and terephthalaldehyde, yielding a very pure thermoplastic rigid-rod polymer, polybenzoxazole (PBO), with a molecular weight that is tunable from 5.8 to 19.1 kDa. The PBO films are more resistant to hydrolysis and possess thermal and mechanical properties that are superior to those of commercial PBO, Zylon. Cu NPs are also active in catalyzing tandem reactions to form PBO when formic acid is replaced with ammonia borane. Our work demonstrates a general approach to the green chemistry synthesis of rigid-rod polymers as lightweight structural materials for broad thermomechanical applications.

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