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1.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(62): 9204-9207, 2019 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31309942

ABSTRACT

In order to gain better control over the functionality of Pd nanostructures used in several CO2-mitigating electrochemical energy conversion systems, it is imperative to underpin different nanoscale phenomena influencing their structural durability. Hitherto, such analyses have been carried out before/after an electrochemical treatment, but not during the entire process. Here, we demonstrate monitoring of morphological evolution in Pd nanostructures over the entire course of electrochemical treatment using a liquid-cell transmission electron microscope (TEM) set-up. Our findings reveal new insights into nanoparticle growth, dissolution, detachment, and aggregation that are relevant for the development of functional Pd nanomaterials.

2.
ACS Nano ; 11(11): 10984-10991, 2017 11 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29072899

ABSTRACT

In the quest to identify more effective catalyst nanoparticles for many industrially important applications, the Au-Pt system has gathered considerable attention. Despite considerable effort the interplay between phase equilibrium behavior and surface segregation in Au-Pt nanoparticles is still poorly understood. Here we investigate the phase equilibrium behavior of 20 nm Au-Pt nanoparticles using a combination of high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy and a hybrid Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics atomistic simulation technique. Our approach takes into account the effects of immiscibility, elastic strain, interfacial free energy, and surface segregation. This is used to explain two key phenomena taking place in these nanoparticles. The first is whether the binary system remains immiscible at the nanoscale, and if so what morphology would the secondary phase take. Our findings suggest that even at sizes of 20 nm, thermally equilibrated Au-Pt nanoparticles remain largely immiscible and behave thermodynamically as bulk-like systems. We explain why 20 nm Au-Pt nanoparticles phase separate into hemispheres as opposed to a thick-shelled core-shell structure. These insights are central to further optimization of Au-Pt nanoparticles toward enhanced catalytic activities. The phase-separated Janus particles observed in this study offer enhanced material functionality arising from the nonuniformity of their plasmonic, catalytic, and surface properties.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 8(50): 34431-34437, 2016 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27998120

ABSTRACT

Considering the effect of CO2 emission together with the depletion of fossil fuel resources on future generations, industries in particular the transportation sector are in deep need of a viable solution to follow the environmental regulation to limit the CO2 emission. Thermoelectrics may be a practical choice for recovering the waste heat, provided their conversion energy can be improved. Here, the high temperature thermoelectric properties of high purity Bi doped Mg2(Si,Sn) are presented. The samples Mg2Si1-x-ySnxBiy with x(Sn) ≥ 0.6 and y(Bi) ≥ 0.03 exhibited electrical conductivities and Seebeck coefficients of approximately 1000 Ω-1 cm-1 and -200 µV K-1 at 773 K, respectively, attributable to a combination of band convergence and microstructure engineering through ball mill processing. In addition to the high electrical conductivity and Seebeck coefficient, the thermal conductivity of the solid solutions reached values below 2.5 W m-1 K-1 due to highly efficient phonon scattering from mass fluctuation and grain boundary effects. These properties combined for zT values of 1.4 at 773 K with an average zT of 0.9 between 400 and 773 K. The transport properties were both highly reproducible across several measurement systems and were stable with thermal cycling.

4.
ChemCatChem ; 7(22): 3655-3664, 2015 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26613010

ABSTRACT

Coupling electron microscopy techniques with in situ heating ability allows us to study phase transformations on the single-nanoparticle level. We exploit this setup to study disorder-to-order transformation of Pt-Fe alloy nanoparticles, a material that is of great interest to fuel-cell electrocatalysis and ultrahigh density information storage. In contrast to earlier reports, we show that Fe (instead of Pt) segregates towards the particle surface during annealing and forms a Fe-rich FeO x outer shell over the alloy core. By combining both ex situ and in situ approaches to probe the interplay between ordering and surface-segregation phenomena, we illustrate that the surface segregation of Fe precedes the ordering process and affects the ordered phase evolution dramatically. We show that the ordering initiates preferably at the pre-existent Fe-rich shell than the particle core. While the material-specific findings from this study open interesting perspectives towards a controlled phase evolution of Pt-Fe nanoalloys, the characterization methodologies described are general and should prove useful to probing a wide-range of nanomaterials.

5.
Dalton Trans ; 43(40): 14983-91, 2014 Oct 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25005794

ABSTRACT

Due to increasing global energy concerns, alternative sustainable methods to create energy such as thermoelectric energy conversion have become increasingly important. Originally, research into thermoelectric materials was focused on tellurides of bismuth and lead because of the exemplary thermoelectric properties of Bi2Te3 and PbTe. These materials, however, contain toxic lead and tellurium, which is also scarce and thus expensive. A viable alternative material may exist in Mg2Si, which needs to be doped and alloyed in order to achieve reasonable thermoelectric efficiency. Doping is a major problem, as p-type doping has thus far not produced competitive efficiencies, and n-type doping is problematic because of the low solubility of the typical dopants Sb and Bi. This investigation shows experimentally that these dopants can indeed replace Si in the crystal lattice, and excess Sb and Bi atoms are present in the grain boundaries in the form of Mg3Sb2 and Mg3Bi2. As a consequence, the carrier concentration is lower than the formal Sb/Bi concentration suggests, and the thermal conductivity is significantly reduced. DFT calculations are in good agreement with the experimental data, including the band gap and the Seebeck coefficient. Overall, this results in competitive efficiencies despite the low carrier concentration. While ball-milling was previously shown to enhance the solubility of the dopants and thus the carrier concentration, this did not lead to enhanced thermoelectric properties.

6.
ACS Nano ; 7(7): 6103-10, 2013 Jul 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23773037

ABSTRACT

Fine-tuning nanocatalysts to enhance their catalytic activity and durability is crucial to commercialize proton exchange membrane fuel cells. The structural ordering and time evolution of ordered Pt3Fe2 intermetallic core-shell nanocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction that exhibit increased mass activity (228%) and an enhanced catalytic activity (155%) compared to Pt/C has been quantified using aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy. These catalysts were found to exhibit a static core-dynamic shell regime wherein, despite treating over 10,000 cycles, there is negligible decrease (9%) in catalytic activity and the ordered Pt3Fe2 core remained virtually intact while the Pt shell suffered a continuous enrichment. The existence of this regime was further confirmed by X-ray diffraction and the compositional analyses using energy-dispersive spectroscopy. With atomic-scale two-dimensional (2-D) surface relaxation mapping, we demonstrate that the Pt atoms on the surface are slightly relaxed with respect to bulk. The cycled nanocatalysts were found to exhibit a greater surface relaxation compared to noncycled catalysts. With 2-D lattice strain mapping, we show that the particle was about -3% strained with respect to pure Pt. While the observed enhancement in their activity is ascribed to such a strained lattice, our findings on the degradation kinetics establish that their extended catalytic durability is attributable to a sustained atomic order.


Subject(s)
Iron/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/ultrastructure , Nanopores/ultrastructure , Platinum/chemistry , Alloys/chemistry , Catalysis , Elastic Modulus , Materials Testing , Tensile Strength
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