| Literature DB >> 27069402 |
Abstract
ABSTRACT: The interaction of the metal-support and particle shape has a key role on the determination of the particle size by gas chemisorption. This paper demonstrates mathematically that, assuming metal particles with hemispherical shapes (a common assumption in this type of characterisation) can provide misleading results of up to one order of magnitude. Thus, the metal particle sizes are underestimated when the metal strongly interacts with the support and overestimated when there is a weak metal-support interaction. Additionally, we also demonstrate that although the assumption of spherical shapes always underestimates the size of particles, this error is considerably lower with regular geometries than that associated to the effect of the metal-support interaction due to their effect on the particle shape. Herein, it is demonstrated the importance of introducing the particle-support interaction factor in the chemisorption particle size determination.Entities:
Keywords: Metal nanoparticle; Metal-support interaction; Modelling and simulations; Particle shape, chemisorption; Particle size
Year: 2016 PMID: 27069402 PMCID: PMC4805706 DOI: 10.1007/s11051-016-3385-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanopart Res ISSN: 1388-0764 Impact factor: 2.253
Fig. 1Effect of metal-support contact angle on the geometry of the metal nanoparticle
Fig. 2Effect of contact angle on the average particle size calculated by chemisorption for different metal dispersion values: blue circle 90 % red triangle 70 %, green diamond 50 %, violet square 30 %. (Color figure online)
Fig. 3Percentage increase and decrease of particle size respect to the hemispherical shape (θ = 90°) when the contact angle is >90° (blue diamond) and <90° (red square), respectively. 70 % metal dispersion. (Color figure online)
Fig. 4Effect of metal particle shape on the estimated particle size
Fig. 5Error associated to the assumption of spherical shape (contact angle 90°) respect to other metal particle shapes
Fig. 6Percentage of particle size calculation as a function of the stoichiometric factor, taking SF = 1 as baseline