| Literature DB >> 31406363 |
Yonggang Yao1, Zhennan Huang2, Pengfei Xie3, Lianping Wu4, Lu Ma5, Tangyuan Li1, Zhenqian Pang4, Miaolun Jiao1, Zhiqiang Liang1, Jinlong Gao1, Yang He6, Dylan Jacob Kline7, Michael R Zachariah7, Chongmin Wang6, Jun Lu5, Tianpin Wu8, Teng Li9, Chao Wang10, Reza Shahbazian-Yassar11, Liangbing Hu12.
Abstract
The stability of single-atom catalysts is critical for their practical applications. Although a high temperature can promote the bond formation between metal atoms and the substrate with an enhanced stability, it often causes atom agglomeration and is incompatible with many temperature-sensitive substrates. Here, we report using controllable high-temperature shockwaves to synthesize and stabilize single atoms at very high temperatures (1,500-2,000 K), achieved by a periodic on-off heating that features a short on state (55 ms) and a ten-times longer off state. The high temperature provides the activation energy for atom dispersion by forming thermodynamically favourable metal-defect bonds and the off-state critically ensures the overall stability, especially for the substrate. The resultant high-temperature single atoms exhibit a superior thermal stability as durable catalysts. The reported shockwave method is facile, ultrafast and universal (for example, Pt, Ru and Co single atoms, and carbon, C3N4 and TiO2 substrates), which opens a general route for single-atom manufacturing that is conventionally challenging.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31406363 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-019-0518-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213