| Literature DB >> 31444350 |
Hui Wang1, Jin-Xun Liu2,3, Lawrence F Allard4, Sungsik Lee5, Jilei Liu6, Hang Li1, Jianqiang Wang1, Jun Wang1, Se H Oh7, Wei Li7, Maria Flytzani-Stephanopoulos6, Meiqing Shen8,9,10, Bryan R Goldsmith11,12, Ming Yang13.
Abstract
Despite the maximized metal dispersion offered by single-atom catalysts, further improvement of intrinsic activity can be hindered by the lack of neighboring metal atoms in these systems. Here we report the use of isolated Pt1 atoms on ceria as "seeds" to develop a Pt-O-Pt ensemble, which is well-represented by a Pt8O14 model cluster that retains 100% metal dispersion. The Pt atom in the ensemble is 100-1000 times more active than their single-atom Pt1/CeO2 parent in catalyzing the low-temperature CO oxidation under oxygen-rich conditions. Rather than the Pt-O-Ce interfacial catalysis, the stable catalytic unit is the Pt-O-Pt site itself without participation of oxygen from the 10-30 nm-size ceria support. Similar Pt-O-Pt sites can be built on various ceria and even alumina, distinguishable by facile activation of oxygen through the paired Pt-O-Pt atoms. Extending this design to other reaction systems is a likely outcome of the findings reported here.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31444350 PMCID: PMC6707320 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-11856-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Key metrics of the Pt1/CeO2 and the Pt-O-Pt/CeO2 catalysts
| Samples | Pt material efficiency (%)a | Active sites | Relative activity | Rate-determining step | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pt1/CeO2 | ~100 | Isolated Pt1 atoms embedded in CeO2 surface by substitution of surface Ce atoms | 1×b | 86 ± 3 (Exp.) 78 (The.) | O2 dissociation at Pt1/CeO2; CeO2 is involved in the catalytic cycle |
| Pt-O-Pt /CeO2 | ~100 | Pt-O-Pt ensemble. Pt atoms are separated but bridged by four oxygen atoms | ~102 – 103 higherc | 40 ± 2 (Exp.) 54 (The.) | Oxygen atom migration at the Pt-O-Pt ensemble; CeO2 is not involved in the catalytic cycle |
HAADF-STEM, high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy, Exp., experiment measured, The., theory predicted
aBased on spectroscopic observations from HAADF-STEM images and the chemical titrations of CO chemisorption
bThe catalyst activity is similar with many recently reported single-atom Pt1/CeO2 catalysts (see Supplementary Table 1)
cReaction in the window of 80–150 °C
Fig. 1Direct measurements of the Pt1/CeO2 and Pt-O-Pt/CeO2 catalysts. a, b Aberration-corrected high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy (HAADF-STEM) images for the Pt1/CeO2-a and Pt-O-Pt/CeO2-a catalysts (shown images were recorded at ×10 M and ×6 M original magnifications, respectively). Yellow circles and squares are used to highlight the single-atom Pt1 and the Pt-O-Pt ensemble, respectively. c CO oxidation light-off performance ([CO] = 1000 ppm, [O2] = 5%, balanced with N2 at a contact time of 2,400,000 mL/gcat//h). d Arrhenius-type plot of CO oxidation rates at different temperatures with apparent activation energies (Eapp) shown
Fig. 2The density functional theory (DFT)-optimized Pt structures and the material characterization results. a, b DFT-optimized structure of representative single-atom Pt in the Pt1/CeO2 sample and Pt8O14 in the Pt-O-Pt/CeO2 sample found by grand canonical Monte Carlo-DFT (GCMC-DFT). c Normalized Pt L3 edge x-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectra and d Pt 4f x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) spectra of the Pt1/CeO2-a and the Pt-O-Pt/CeO2-a catalysts. e Fourier transform of extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectra of Pt L3 edge (phase corrected) for the Pt1/CeO2-a and Pt-O-Pt/CeO2-a catalysts. The first shell Pt-Pt coordination is not observed in the Pt1/CeO2 and Pt-O-Pt/CeO2 catalysts. The gray and red open circles are fitted curves for the Pt1/CeO2 and Pt-O-Pt/CeO2 catalysts, respectively. The PtO2 standard is in the β-phase. f In situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier-transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) under the CO oxidation conditions for the Pt1/CeO2-a and Pt-O-Pt/CeO2-a catalysts. DFT-predicted CO adsorption modes are shown inset for Pt1/CeO2 − and Pt8O13/CeO2. Color legend of atoms: Ce = beige; Pt = blue; C = gray; O (in CeO2 and Pt8O13) = red; O (in CO) = green
Fig. 3Potential energy diagrams and configurations for CO oxidation cycle. CO oxidation proceeds on a the Pt1/CeO2 and b at the Pt-O-Pt catalytic unit in Pt8O14/CeO2. CO adsorption energies and reaction barriers are indicated in kJ/mol in the potential energy diagram. The bond distance between the two fragments at the transition state (TS) is given in angstrom (Å) in the configurations of CO oxidation. Beige, red, and blue spheres are Ce, O, and Pt atoms, respectively. The small gray and green spheres are C and O atoms involved in CO oxidation. Corresponding energetics are given in Supplementary Table 4
Fig. 4Microkinetic simulations for various CO oxidation routes on the Pt1/CeO2 and Pt8O14/CeO2 structures. The predicted apparent activation barriers, Eapp (The., theory predicted), are indicated
Fig. 5Catalyst surface [O] reducibility and site-specific turnover frequencies (TOFs) for CO oxidation reaction. a H2 temperature programmed reduction (TPR) profiles and integrated amounts of reducible [O] for the Pt1/CeO2 and Pt-O-Pt/CeO2 catalysts. The labeled values in a are the integrated amount of reducible oxygen with the default unit of “µmol [O]/gcat.” b Identical TOFs were found for the Pt-O-Pt/CeO2 catalysts and different TOFs were found for the Pt-free ceria supports (inset)
Fig. 6Different transition states for oxygen activation by the Pt1-O-Ce and the Pt-O-Pt ensembles. The detailed configurations for the CO oxidation cycles of the two groups of catalysts are illustrated in Fig. 3. The Pt1 single atoms are assembled into the more active Pt-O-Pt ensembles during the activation protocol. Color legend of atoms: Ce = yellow; Pt = blue; O = red; O atoms in the transition states for O2 activation are green. MvK = Mars–van Krevelen