| Literature DB >> 33479148 |
Jan Hulva1, Matthias Meier1,2, Roland Bliem1, Zdenek Jakub1, Florian Kraushofer1, Michael Schmid1, Ulrike Diebold1, Cesare Franchini2,3, Gareth S Parkinson4.
Abstract
Understanding how the local environment of a "single-atom" catalyst affects stability and reactivity remains a challenge. We present an in-depth study of copper1, silver1, gold1, nickel1, palladium1, platinum1, rhodium1, and iridium1 species on Fe3O4(001), a model support in which all metals occupy the same twofold-coordinated adsorption site upon deposition at room temperature. Surface science techniques revealed that CO adsorption strength at single metal sites differs from the respective metal surfaces and supported clusters. Charge transfer into the support modifies the d-states of the metal atom and the strength of the metal-CO bond. These effects could strengthen the bond (as for Ag1-CO) or weaken it (as for Ni1-CO), but CO-induced structural distortions reduce adsorption energies from those expected on the basis of electronic structure alone. The extent of the relaxations depends on the local geometry and could be predicted by analogy to coordination chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33479148 DOI: 10.1126/science.abe5757
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728