| Literature DB >> 28587462 |
Wangcheng Zhan1, Jinglin Wang1, Haifeng Wang1, Jinshui Zhang, Xiaofei Liu1, Pengfei Zhang, Miaofang Chi, Yanglong Guo1, Yun Guo1, Guanzhong Lu1, Shouheng Sun2, Sheng Dai3, Huiyuan Zhu.
Abstract
Controlling the physical and chemical properties of alloy nanoparticles (NPs) is an important approach to optimize NP catalysis. Unlike other tuning knobs, such as size, shape, and composition, crystal structure has received limited attention and not been well understood for its role in catalysis. This deficiency is mainly due to the difficulty in synthesis and fine-tuning of the NPs' crystal structure. Here, Exemplifying by AuCu alloy NPs with face centered cubic (fcc) and face centered tetragonal (fct) structure, we demonstrate a remarkable difference in phase segregation and catalytic performance depending on the crystal structure. During the thermal treatment in air, the Cu component in fcc-AuCu alloy NPs segregates more easily onto the alloy surface as compared to that in fct-AuCu alloy NPs. As a result, after annealing at 250 °C in air for 1 h, the fcc- and fct-AuCu alloy NPs are phase transferred into Au/CuO and AuCu/CuO core/shell structures, respectively. More importantly, this variation in heterostructures introduces a significant difference in CO adsorption on two catalysts, leading to a largely enhanced catalytic activity of AuCu/CuO NP catalyst for CO oxidation. The same concept can be extended to other alloy NPs, making it possible to fine-tune NP catalysis for many different chemical reactions.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28587462 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b01784
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419