| Literature DB >> 32791833 |
Jin Soo Lim1, Jonathan Vandermause2,3, Matthijs A van Spronsen1,4, Albert Musaelian3, Yu Xie3, Lixin Sun3, Christopher R O'Connor1, Tobias Egle1,3, Nicola Molinari3, Jacob Florian1, Kaining Duanmu5, Robert J Madix3, Philippe Sautet5,6, Cynthia M Friend1,3, Boris Kozinsky3,7.
Abstract
The restructuring of interfaces plays a crucial role in materials science and heterogeneous catalysis. Bimetallic systems, in particular, often adopt very different compositions and morphologies at surfaces compared to the bulk. For the first time, we reveal a detailed atomistic picture of long-time scale restructuring of Pd deposited on Ag using microscopy, spectroscopy, and novel simulation methods. By developing and performing accelerated machine-learning molecular dynamics followed by an automated analysis method, we discover and characterize previously unidentified surface restructuring mechanisms in an unbiased fashion, including Pd-Ag place exchange and Ag pop-out as well as step ascent and descent. Remarkably, layer-by-layer dissolution of Pd into Ag is always preceded by an encapsulation of Pd islands by Ag, resulting in a significant migration of Ag out of the surface and a formation of extensive vacancy pits within a period of microseconds. These metastable structures are of vital catalytic importance, as Ag-encapsulated Pd remains much more accessible to reactants than bulk-dissolved Pd. Our approach is broadly applicable to complex multimetallic systems and enables the previously intractable mechanistic investigation of restructuring dynamics at atomic resolution.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32791833 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c06401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419