| Literature DB >> 35424490 |
Qing Liu1,2, Xiaoxu Wang3, Lu Li1,2, Keke Song1,2, Yanzhou Wang1,2, Ping Qian1,2.
Abstract
Single-atom alloys (SAAs) have been emerging as an important field of research in electrocatalysis owing to extremely high atom utilization, unique structure and high catalytic activity. In this work, the catalytic properties and thermal stability of PdCu SAAs with a crown-jewel (CJ) structure are studied by density functional theory (DFT) calculations and the molecular dynamics (MD) simulation method. The DFT results reveal that CJ-structured PdCu SAAs show excellent HER and ORR catalytic performance, and can be regarded as a promising alternative to Pt catalysts towards the ORR or HER. Additionally, we attempt to explain the high catalytic activity of PdCu SAAs by electronic structure analysis. In addition, MD simulation results confirm the thermal stability of CJ-structured PdCu. More importantly, we found that CJ-structured PdCu clusters undergo a structural transformation from cuboctahedral (Cubo) to icosahedral (Ico) structure by heating or after the adsorption of reaction intermediate, which indicates that Cubo is less stable than the Ico structure. Besides, Cubo-Ico transformation is size-dependent and only found in small clusters. Furthermore, the effects of size and morphology on melting properties are discussed. The melting point increases as cluster size increases, which agrees well with Pawlow's law. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35424490 PMCID: PMC8978693 DOI: 10.1039/d1ra07581k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Schematic models of crown jewels (CJ) systems with (a) Ico and (b) Cubo structures. The blue spheres represent jewels (single atoms) and the yellow metal cluster represent the crown (host cluster). The jewels (single atoms) decorate the vertex sites of the crown (host cluster). In this work, single atoms refer to Pd atoms, host cluster refers to Cu cluster. Besides, the possible adsorption sites of 55-atom PdCu clusters for (c) Ico and (d) Cubo.
The hydrogen adsorption energies (EH*) and Gibbs free energy ΔGH at most stable adsorption sites for PdCu, Pt and Pd nanoclusters
| Cluster | Configuration | Adsorption site |
| Δ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pd12Cu43 | Ico | H1 | −0.34 | −0.10 |
| Pd12Cu43 | Cubo | — | — | — |
| Pd12Cu135 | Ico | H1 | −0.26 | −0.02 |
| Pd12Cu135 | Cubo | — | — | — |
| Pd55 | Ico | H1 | −0.66 | −0.42 |
| Pd55 | Cubo | H1 | −0.56 | −0.32 |
| Pt55 | Ico | B1 | −0.82 | −0.58 |
| Pt55 | Cubo | B1 | −0.75 | −0.51 |
| Pt147 | Ico | B1 | −0.63 | −0.39 |
Fig. 2The Cubo–Ico structural transformation of (a) Pd12Cu43 and (b) Pd12Cu135 clusters after the adsorption of hydrogen atom; (c) the calculated Gibbs free energy diagram of hydrogen evolution for PdCu, Pt and Pd nanoclusters. DFT calculations of electronic structure of (d) Pd55 and (e) Pd12Cu43 clusters.
Most favorable adsorption energy of oxygen atom and adsorption sites, ORR RDS and overpotential on PdCu, Pt and Pd nanoclusters with varying size and morphology
| Structures |
| Adsorption site | RDS | Overpotential (V) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pd12Cu43-Ico | −4.73 | H1 | R4 | 0.87 |
| Pd55-Ico | −4.55 | H1 | R3 | 0.81 |
| Pt55-Ico | −4.50 | H1 | R4 | 0.78 |
| Pt55-Cubo | −4.55 | B1 | R4 | 0.88 |
| Pd12Cu135-Ico | −4.38 | H1 | R3 | 0.67 |
| Pd147-Ico | −4.41 | H1 | R3 | 0.74 |
| Pt147-Ico | −4.38 | H1 | R4 | 0.65 |
Fig. 3The Cubo–Ico structural transformation of (a) Pd12Cu43 and (b) Pd12Cu135 clusters after the adsorption of oxygen atom; (c) Pd12Cu43 and (d) Pd12Cu135 clusters after the adsorption of OH species.
Fig. 4The Gibbs free energy diagrams of the ORR pathway occurring on CJ-structured PdCu, Pt and Pd clusters at 0 V, at 1.23 V and at the limiting potential.
Fig. 6(a) The temperature dependence of PE during heating for a CJ-structured PdCu–Cubo with 147 and 309 atoms; (b) PdCu–Cubo with 561 and 923 atoms; (c) PdCu with Ico structures; (d) the melting point of PdCu SAAs versus N−1/3.
Fig. 5Total RDFs for CJ-structured Pd12Cu297 SAA with Cubo at different temperatures during heating. Inset: the corresponding structural evolution snapshot at different temperatures.
The Cubo–Ico transformation temperature (Ttran) of Cubo structures, and the melting points (Tmelt) of CJ-structured PdCu SAAs with the different cluster sizes and morphologies
| Structure |
|
| Structure |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cubo-147 | 0 | 812 | Ico-147 | 788 |
| Cubo-309 | 320 | 846 | Ico-309 | 858 |
| Cubo-561 | — | 918 | Ico-561 | 938 |
| Cubo-923 | — | 947 | Ico-923 | 974 |