| Literature DB >> 30792302 |
Lei Wang1, Zhenhua Zeng2, Wenpei Gao3, Tristan Maxson4, David Raciti1, Michael Giroux1, Xiaoqing Pan3,5, Chao Wang6, Jeffrey Greeley2.
Abstract
Tuning surface strain is a powerful strategy for tailoring the reactivity of metal catalysts. Traditionally, surface strain is imposed by external stress from a heterogeneous substrate, but the effect is often obscured by interfacial reconstructions and nanocatalyst geometries. Here, we report on a strategy to resolve these problems by exploiting intrinsic surface stresses in two-dimensional transition metal nanosheets. Density functional theory calculations indicate that attractive interactions between surface atoms lead to tensile surface stresses that exert a pressure on the order of 105 atmospheres on the surface atoms and impart up to 10% compressive strain, with the exact magnitude inversely proportional to the nanosheet thickness. Atomic-level control of thickness thus enables generation and fine-tuning of intrinsic strain to optimize catalytic reactivity, which was confirmed experimentally on Pd(110) nanosheets for the oxygen reduction and hydrogen evolution reactions, with activity enhancements that were more than an order of magnitude greater than those of their nanoparticle counterparts.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30792302 DOI: 10.1126/science.aat8051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728