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1.
JACS Au ; 2(9): 2119-2134, 2022 Sep 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36186571

RESUMO

Aqueous solvation free energies of adsorption have recently been measured for phenol adsorption on Pt(111). Endergonic solvent effects of ∼1 eV suggest solvents dramatically influence a metal catalyst's activity with significant implications for the catalyst design. However, measurements are indirect and involve adsorption isotherm models, which potentially reduces the reliability of the extracted energy values. Computational, implicit solvation models predict exergonic solvation effects for phenol adsorption, failing to agree with measurements even qualitatively. In this study, an explicit, hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical approach for computing solvation free energies of adsorption is developed, solvation free energies of phenol adsorption are computed, and experimental data for solvation free energies of phenol adsorption are reanalyzed using multiple adsorption isotherm models. Explicit solvation calculations predict an endergonic solvation free energy for phenol adsorption that agrees well with measurements to within the experimental and force field uncertainties. Computed adsorption free energies of solvation of carbon monoxide, ethylene glycol, benzene, and phenol over the (111) facet of Pt and Cu suggest that liquid water destabilizes all adsorbed species, with the largest impact on the largest adsorbates.

2.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 614: 425-435, 2022 May 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35108634

RESUMO

Adsorbate molecules present in a reaction mixture may bind to and block catalytic sites. Measurement of the surface coverage of these molecules via adsorption isotherms is critical for modeling and design of catalytic reactions on surfaces. However, it is challenging to measure isotherms in solution in a way that is directly relevant to catalytic activity under reaction conditions, particularly since adsorbates may bind with an enormous range of surface affinity parameters. Here we used the motion of self-propelled catalytic Janus particles, which employ the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide fuel as a propulsion mechanism, to determine the effective surface coverage of thioglycerol, furfural, and ethanol on a platinum surface as a function of concentration in aqueous solution by measuring the decrease in active motion due to the blocking of active sites. For strongly adsorbing thioglycerol, this effective coverage was compared and contrasted to the total adsorbed amount measured using inductively-coupled plasma analysis. Demonstrating the broad applicability of this approach, the surface affinity of the three adsorbates spanned more than four orders of magnitude. For each species, the adsorbate-mediated attenuation of active motion occurred over a wide concentration range and was well-described by a Langmuir isotherm. The strongly interacting thioglycerol had the highest affinity towards the surface (Ka = 15.5 ± 4.3 mM-1) and fully deactivated the active particle motion at surface saturation. Furfural had an intermediate affinity (Ka = 0.42 ± 0.07 mM-1) but did not fully block H2O2 access to the surface at apparent saturation, consistent with a maximum fractional surface coverage of θmax = 0.67. Ethanol exhibited even lower affinity (Ka = 0.0025 ± 2x10-4 mM-1) and its coverage saturated at only θmax = 0.38. Analysis of isotherms at elevated temperatures enabled direct extraction of the enthalpies of adsorption. The degree of surface coverage at adsorbate saturation appeared to correlate with the relative energies of adsorption for the different adsorbate species and was consistent with adsorbate saturation of one of multiple active site populations towards H2O2 decomposition. Moreover, computational investigations into solvent effects on furfural adsorption showed good quantitative agreement with the experimental results. This work leverages unique properties of active particles to explore fundamental catalysis questions and demonstrates a novel paradigm for significant and experimentally accessible multidisciplinary research.


Assuntos
Peróxido de Hidrogênio , Adsorção , Catálise , Solventes/química , Termodinâmica
3.
Commun Chem ; 3(1): 187, 2020 Dec 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36703410

RESUMO

Solvent interactions with adsorbed moieties involved in surface reactions are often believed to be similar for different metal surfaces. However, solvents alter the electronic structures of surface atoms, which in turn affects their interaction with adsorbed moieties. To reveal the importance of metal identity on aqueous solvent effects in heterogeneous catalysis, we studied solvent effects on the activation free energies of the O-H and C-H bond cleavages of ethylene glycol over the (111) facet of six transition metals (Ni, Pd, Pt, Cu, Ag, Au) using an explicit solvation approach based on a hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) description of the potential energy surface. A significant metal dependence on aqueous solvation effects was observed that suggests solvation effects must be studied in detail for every reaction system. The main reason for this dependence could be traced back to a different amount of charge-transfer between the adsorbed moieties and metals in the reactant and transition states for the different metal surfaces.

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