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1.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; : e2408522, 2024 Sep 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39303204

ABSTRACT

The effective utilization of hydrogen storage materials (HSMs) is hindered by impurity gas poisoning, posing a significant challenge for large-scale applications. This study elucidates the poisoning mechanisms of various impurities gases (CO, CO2, O2, Ar, He, CH4, N2) on ZrCo, Pd, U and LaNi5. Impurities gases are categorized into active and inactive types based on their effecting behaviors and mechanisms on the hydrogenation of HSMs. During the hydrogenation process, active impurities chemically poison the hydrogenation reaction by limiting hydrogen absorption at interface, while inactive impurities physically hinder hydrogenation reaction by impeding hydrogen diffusion in hydrogen-impurity mixed gas. In situ Scanning Tunneling Microscope clarifies these behaviors, and a novel criterion based on hydrogen spontaneous dissociation energy is introduced to explain and predict impurity-substrate interaction characteristics. The novel findings of this work provide a comprehensive framework for designing long-lived HSMs with poisoning resistance, guiding the development of more resilient hydrogen storage systems.

2.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 5806, 2024 Jul 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38987569

ABSTRACT

Hydrogenation is a versatile chemical process with significant applications in various industries, including food production, petrochemical refining, pharmaceuticals, and hydrogen carriers/safety. Traditional hydrogenation of aromatics, hindered by the stable π-conjugated phenyl ring structures, typically requires high temperatures and pressures, making ambient hydrogenation a grand challenge. Herein, we introduce a PdPtRuCuNi high entropy alloy (HEA) nanocatalyst, achieving an exceptional 100% hydrogenation of carbon-carbon unsaturated bonds, including alkynyl and phenyl groups, in solid 1,4-bis(phenylethynyl)benzene (DEB) at 25 °C under ≤1 bar H2 and solventless condition. This results in a threefold higher hydrogen uptake for DEB-contained composites compared to conventional Pd catalysts, which can only hydrogenate the alkynyl groups with a ~ 27% conversion of DEB. Our experimental results, complemented by theoretical calculations, reveal that PdPtRu alloy is highly active and crucial in enabling the hydrogenation of phenyl groups, while all five elements work synergistically to regulate the reaction rate. Remarkably, this newly developed catalyst also achieves nearly 100% reactivity for ambient hydrogenation of a broad range of aromatics, suggesting its universal effectiveness. Our research uncovers a novel material platform and catalyst design principle for efficient and general hydrogenation. The multi-element synergy in HEA also promises unique catalytic behaviors beyond hydrogenation applications.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(24): 31126-31136, 2024 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836772

ABSTRACT

Interfacial hydrogen transfer between metal particles and catalyst supports is a ubiquitous phenomenon in heterogeneous catalysis, and this occurrence on reducible supports has been established, yet controversies remain about how hydrogen transfer can take place on nonreducible supports, such as silica. Herein, highly dispersed Pt clusters supported on a series of porous silica materials with zeolitic or/and amorphous frameworks were prepared to interrogate the nature of hydrogen transfer and its promotional effect on H2-HDO isotope catalytic exchange. The formation of zeolitic frameworks upon these porous silica supports by hydrothermal crystallization greatly promotes the interfacial hydrogen bidirectional migration between metal clusters and supports. Benefiting from this transfer effect, the isotope exchange rate is enhanced by 10 times compared to that on the amorphous counterpart (e.g., Pt/SBA-15). In situ spectroscopic and theoretical studies suggest that the defective silanols formed within the zeolite framework serve as the reactive sites to bind HDO or H2O by hydrogen bonds. Under the electrostatic attraction interaction, the D of hydrogen-bonded HDO scrambles to the Pt site and the dissociated H on Pt simultaneously spills back to the electronegative oxygen atom of adsorbed water to attain H-D isotope exchange with an energy barrier of 0.43 eV. The reverse spillover D on Pt combines with the other H on Pt to form HD in the effluent. We anticipate that these findings are able to improve our understanding of hydrogen transfer between metal and silica supports and favor the catalyst design for the hydrogen-involving reaction.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(22): 15547-15554, 2023 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37252712

ABSTRACT

Lanthanum oxide (La2O3) possesses superior reactivity during catalytic hydrogenation, but the intrinsic activity of La2O3 toward H2 adsorption and activation remains unclear. In the present work, we fundamentally investigated hydrogen interaction with Ni-modified La2O3. Hydrogen temperature programmed desorption (H2-TPD) on Ni/La2O3 shows enhanced hydrogen adsorption with a new hydrogen desorption peak at a higher temperature position compared to that on the metallic Ni surfaces. By systematically exploring the desorption experiments, the enhanced H2 adsorption on Ni/La2O3 is due to the oxygen vacancies formed at the metal-oxide interfaces. Hydrogen atoms transfer from Ni surfaces to the oxygen vacancies to form lanthanum oxyhydride species (H-La-O) at the metal-oxide interfaces. The adsorbed hydrogen at the metal-oxide interfaces of Ni/La2O3 results in improved catalytic reactivity in CO2 methanation. Furthermore, the enhanced hydrogen adsorption on the interfacial oxygen vacancies is ubiquitous for La2O3-supported Fe, Co, and Ni nanoparticles. Benefiting from the modification effect of the supported transition metal nanoparticles, the surface oxyhydride species can be formed on La2O3 surfaces, which resembles the recently reported oxyhydride observed on the reducible CeO2 surfaces with abundant surface oxygen vacancies. These findings strengthen our understanding of the surface chemistry of La2O3 and shed new light on the design of highly efficient La2O3-based catalysts with metal-oxide interfaces.

5.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 2758, 2019 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31213609

ABSTRACT

An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.

6.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 2294, 2019 05 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31127109

ABSTRACT

The intramolecular conversion of CO2 to molecular oxygen is an exotic reaction, rarely observed even with extreme optical or electronic excitation means. Here we show that this reaction occurs readily when CO2 ions scatter from solid surfaces in a two-step sequential collision process at hyperthermal incidence energies. The produced O2 is preferentially ionized by charge transfer from the surface over the predominant atomic oxygen product, leading to direct detection of both O2+ and O2-. First-principles simulations of the collisional dynamics reveal that O2 production proceeds via strongly-bent CO2 configurations, without visiting other intermediates. Bent CO2 provides dynamic access to the symmetric dissociation of CO2 to C+O2 with a calculated yield of 1 to 2% depending on molecular orientation. This unexpected collision-induced transformation of individual CO2 molecules provides an accessible pathway for generating O2 in astrophysical environments and may inspire plasma-driven electro- and photo-catalytic strategies for terrestrial CO2 reduction.

7.
Nat Commun ; 8: 15298, 2017 05 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28480881

ABSTRACT

Abundant molecular oxygen was discovered in the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Its origin was ascribed to primordial gaseous O2 incorporated into the nucleus during the comet's formation. This thesis was put forward after discounting several O2 production mechanisms in comets, including photolysis and radiolysis of water, solar wind-surface interactions and gas-phase collisions. Here we report an original Eley-Rideal reaction mechanism, which permits direct O2 formation in single collisions of energetic water ions with oxidized cometary surface analogues. The reaction proceeds by H2O+ abstracting a surface O-atom, then forming an excited precursor state, which dissociates to produce O2-. Subsequent photo-detachment leads to molecular O2, whose presence in the coma may thus be linked directly to water molecules and their interaction with the solar wind. This abiotic O2 production mechanism is consistent with reported trends in the 67P coma and raises awareness of the role of energetic negative ions in comets.

8.
Chem Sci ; 8(4): 2852-2858, 2017 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28553523

ABSTRACT

We report the direct formation of H2 and O pair ions through single collisions of water ions with metal surfaces at hyperthermal energies. This unusual intramolecular reaction proceeds also for heavy and semi-heavy water, producing molecular D2 and HD ions. The selectivity of this water splitting channel is estimated at being between 9 and 13% versus complete dissociation. The collision kinematics support the hypothesis of a water molecule colliding with a single surface atom, thereby forming an excited precursor (Rydberg?) state, which dissociates subsequently to form the molecular hydrogen ion with high kinetic energy. Inelastic energy loss considerations yield an estimate for the energy of the excited precursor state of ∼7 eV and ∼11 eV at low and high incidence energies. These energies are close to the à state (1B1, 7.5 eV) and B state (1A1, 9.7 eV) of excited water (Rydberg states).

9.
J Chem Phys ; 146(5): 052806, 2017 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28178813

ABSTRACT

The thermal chemistry of Cu(I)-sec-butyl-2-iminopyrrolidinate, a promising copper amidinate complex for atomic layer deposition (ALD) applications, was explored comparatively on several surfaces by using a combination of surface-sensitive techniques, specifically temperature-programmed desorption and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The substrates explored include single crystals of transition metals (Ni(110) and Cu(110)), thin oxide films (NiO/Ni(110) and SiO2/Ta), and oxygen-treated metals (O/Cu(110)). Decomposition of the pyrrolidinate ligand leads to the desorption of several gas-phase products, including CH3CN, HCN and butene from the metals and CO and CO2 from the oxygen-containing surfaces. In all cases dehydrogenation of the organic moieties is accompanied by hydrogen removal from the surface, in the form of H2 on metals and mainly as water from the metal oxides, but the threshold for this chemistry varies wildly, from 270 K on Ni(110) to 430 K on O/Cu(110), 470 K on Cu(110), 500 K on NiO/Ni(110), and 570 K on SiO2/Ta. Copper reduction is also observed in both the Cu 2p3/2 XPS and the Cu L3 VV Auger (AES) spectra, reaching completion by 300 K on Ni(110) but occurring only between 500 and 600 K on Cu(110). On NiO/Ni(110), both Cu(I) and Cu(0) coexist between 200 and 500 K, and on SiO2/Ta a change happens between 500 and 600 K but the reduction is limited, with the copper atoms retaining a significant ionic character. Additional experiments to test adsorption at higher temperatures led to the identification of temperature windows for the self-limiting precursor uptake required for ALD between approximately 300 and 450 K on both Ni(110) and NiO/Ni(110); the range on SiO2 had been previously determined to be wider, reaching an upper limit at about 500 K. Finally, deposition of copper metal films via ALD cycles with O2 as the co-reactant was successfully accomplished on the Ni(110) substrate.

10.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 18(43): 29858-29863, 2016 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27759137

ABSTRACT

For over 90 years, nitroxyl (HNO) has been postulated to be an important reaction intermediate in the catalytic oxidation of ammonia to NO and its by-products (N2, N2O), but never proven to form or exist on catalytic surfaces. Here we show evidence from reactive ion beam experiments that HNO can form directly on the surface of polycrystalline Pt exposed to NH3via Eley-Rideal abstraction reactions of adsorbed NH by energetic O+ and O2+ projectiles. The dynamic formation of HNO in a single collision followed up by prompt rebound from the surface prevents subsequent reactive interactions with other surface adsorbates and enables its detection. In addition to HNO, NO and OH are also detected as direct products in what constitutes the concurrent abstraction of three surface adsorbates, namely NH, N, and H, by O+ projectiles with entirely predictable kinematics. While its relation to thermal catalysis may be tenuous, dynamic HNO formation could be important on grain surfaces of interstellar or cometary matter under astrophysical conditions.

11.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 55(38): 11595-9, 2016 09 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27534611

ABSTRACT

Most Eley-Rideal abstraction reactions involve an energetic gas-phase atom reacting directly with a surface adsorbate to form a molecular product. Molecular projectiles are generally less reactive, may dissociate upon collision with the surface, and thus more difficult to prove that they can participate intact in abstraction reactions. Here we provide experimental evidence for direct reactions occurring between molecular N2 (+) and O2 (+) projectiles and surface-adsorbed D atoms in two steps: first, the two atoms of the diatomic molecule undergo consecutive collisions with a metal surface atom without bond rupture; and second, the rebounding molecule abstracts a surface D atom to form N2 D and O2 D intermediates, respectively, detected as ions. The kinematics of the collisional interaction confirms product formation by an Eley-Rideal reaction mechanism and accounts for inelastic energy losses commensurate with surface re-ionization. Such energetic hydrogenation of dinitrogen may provide facile activation of its triple bond as a first step towards bond cleavage.

12.
Phys Rev Lett ; 116(25): 253202, 2016 Jun 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27391720

ABSTRACT

Direct or Eley-Rideal reactions between energetic N^{+} and O^{+} projectiles and O atoms, adsorbed onto Pt and Pd surfaces, are studied experimentally at incidence energies between 20 and 200 eV. The exit energies of the diatomic molecular products NO and O_{2} depend linearly on the incidence energy of the corresponding projectiles. A reaction mechanism is proposed, where the incident projectile collides with a single metal atom on the surface, linked to an adsorbed O atom. At the apsis point, a high-energy transient state is formed between the projectile, substrate, and adsorbate atoms. As the projectile begins to rebound, the transient state decomposes into a diatomic molecule, consisting of the original projectile and the adsorbed O atom, which exits the surface with memory of the incidence energy. Energy and momentum conservation during this single-bounce event (atom in, molecule out) accurately predict the exit energy of the molecular product, thus capturing the kinematics of the direct reaction.

13.
Chemphyschem ; 17(10): 1430-4, 2016 05 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26879471

ABSTRACT

Charge exchange in ion-surface collisions may be influenced by surface adsorbates to alter the charge state of the scattered projectiles. We show here that the positive-ion yield, observed during ion scattering on metal surfaces at low incident energies, is greatly enhanced by adsorbing electronegative species onto the surface. Specifically, when beams of N(+) and O(+) ions are scattered off of clean Au surfaces at hyperthermal energies, no positive ions are observed exiting. Partial adsorption of F atoms on the Au surface, however, leads to the appearance of positively charged primary ions scattering off of Au, a direct result of the increase in the Au work function. The inelastic energy losses for positive-ion exits are slightly larger than the corresponding ionization energies of the respective N and O atoms, which suggest that the detected positive ions are formed by surface reionization during the hard collision event.

14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(48): 17023-8, 2014 Dec 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25404332

ABSTRACT

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.


Subject(s)
Carbon Monoxide/chemistry , Graphite/chemistry , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Metals/chemistry , Adsorption , Carbon Dioxide/chemistry , Catalysis , Kinetics , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/chemistry , Particle Size , Platinum/chemistry , Surface Properties , Temperature
15.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 16(8): 3823-9, 2014 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24435048

ABSTRACT

It is of great importance to study the catalytic structures under real reaction conditions especially for the bimetallic catalysts, where facile surface restructure or surface segregation can be driven by adsorbate adsorption. Here, we report CO interaction with Cu-Ni/SiO2 bimetallic model catalysts studied by CO temperature programmed desorption (TPD) and in situ CO polarization modulation infrared reflection absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) under CO pressures varying from ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) to near ambient pressure. Under UHV conditions, Cu is enriched on the surface of Cu-Ni/SiO2 bimetallic catalysts. CO spillover from Cu to Ni on Cu-Ni/SiO2 bimetallic catalysts has been observed at about 200 K under UHV conditions. In situ CO PM-IRRAS shows surface segregation of Ni on the Cu-Ni/SiO2 bimetallic catalysts induced by CO adsorption at ambient pressure CO. The behavior of CO induced surface segregation can lead to severe errors in Ni active site measurements by the selective CO chemisorption on Cu-Ni/SiO2 bimetallic catalysts.

16.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 15(35): 14708-14, 2013 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23900259

ABSTRACT

Understanding dynamic changes of catalytically active nanostructures under reaction conditions is a pivotal challenge in catalysis research, which has been extensively addressed in metal nanoparticles but is less explored in supported oxide nanocatalysts. Here, structural changes of iron oxide (FeO(x)) nanostructures supported on Pt in a gaseous environment were examined by scanning tunneling microscopy, ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy using both model systems and real catalysts. O-Fe (FeO) bilayer nanostructures can be stabilized on Pt surfaces in reductive environments such as vacuum conditions and H2-rich reaction gas, which are highly active for low temperature CO oxidation. In contrast, exposure to H2-free oxidative gases produces a less active O-Fe-O (FeO2) trilayer structure. Reversible transformation between the FeO bilayer and FeO2 trilayer structures can be achieved under alternating reduction and oxidation conditions, leading to oscillation in the catalytic oxidation performance.

17.
Science ; 328(5982): 1141-4, 2010 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20508127

ABSTRACT

Coordinatively unsaturated ferrous (CUF) sites confined in nanosized matrices are active centers in a wide range of enzyme and homogeneous catalytic reactions. Preparation of the analogous active sites at supported catalysts is of great importance in heterogeneous catalysis but remains a challenge. On the basis of surface science measurements and density functional calculations, we show that the interface confinement effect can be used to stabilize the CUF sites by taking advantage of strong adhesion between ferrous oxides and metal substrates. The interface-confined CUF sites together with the metal supports are active for dioxygen activation, producing reactive dissociated oxygen atoms. We show that the structural ensemble was highly efficient for carbon monoxide oxidation at low temperature under typical operating conditions of a proton-exchange membrane fuel cell.

18.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 21(31): 314014, 2009 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21828575

ABSTRACT

The reactivity of a bulk Ag surface, an Ag monolayer film on Si(111)- 7 × 7 (denoted as the [Formula: see text]-Ag-Si surface), and Si(111)-7 × 7 to CCl(4) was investigated by x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and ultraviolet photoemission electron microscopy (UV-PEEM). In situ UV-PEEM was used to monitor simultaneously the CCl(4) dissociation on different surface domains, including the bulk Ag, [Formula: see text]-Ag-Si, and Si(111). The PEEM results combined with XPS data show that CCl(4) adsorbs dissociatively on bulk Ag(111) and Si(111) but adsorbs molecularly on the [Formula: see text]-Ag-Si surface, and the surface reactivity follows the order of [Formula: see text]-Ag-Si.

19.
Langmuir ; 24(19): 10874-8, 2008 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18729334

ABSTRACT

Various sizes of Ag particles were grown on highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) surfaces, which had previously been modified with nanopits to act as anchoring sites. Surface reactions of O2, CHCl3, and CCl4 on the Ag particles and bulk Ag(111) surfaces were studied by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and it has been shown that size dependence of O2 and CHCl3 reactions on Ag differs from that of CCl4. Weak reactions of O2 and CHCl3 were observed on the bulk Ag(111) surfaces, while strong reactions occur on Ag particles with medium Ag coverage, suggesting that the reactions are controlled by the number of surface defect sites. On the contrary, the dissociation of CCl4 is mainly determined by the exposed Ag facet area, mainly Ag(111) facet, and strong dissociation reaction happens on the bulk Ag(111) surface. The results suggest that the size effects, which are often discussed in heterogeneous catalysis, are strongly dependent on the reaction mechanism.

20.
J Chem Phys ; 129(1): 014704, 2008 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18624493

ABSTRACT

Pb quantum well films with atomic-scale uniformity in thickness over macroscopic areas were prepared on Si(111)-7x7 surfaces. As a probe molecule, O(2) was used to explore the effect of electron confinement in the metal films on the surface reactivity. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy results showed clear oscillations of oxygen adsorption and Pb oxidation with the thickness of the Pb films. The higher reactivity to O(2) on the films with 23 and 25 ML Pb has been attributed to their highest occupied quantum well states being close to the Fermi level (E(F)) and the high density of the electron states at E(F) (DOS-E(F)), as evidenced by the corresponding ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy. A dominant role of DOS-E(F) was suggested to explain the quantum modulation of surface reactivity in metal quantum well films.

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