| Literature DB >> 35796244 |
Valentina Mastronardi1,2, Junseok Kim3, Marina Veronesi4,5, Tania Pomili1,2, Francesco Berti4, Gayatri Udayan6,7, Rosaria Brescia8, Justus S Diercks9, Juan Herranz9, Tiziano Bandiera4, Kristen A Fichthorn3, Pier Paolo Pompa1, Mauro Moglianetti1,7.
Abstract
Synthesizing metal nanoparticles with fine control of size, shape and surface properties is of high interest for applications such as catalysis, nanoplasmonics, and fuel cells. In this contribution, we demonstrate that the citrate-coated surfaces of palladium (Pd) and platinum (Pt)@Pd nanocubes with a lateral length <5 nm and low polydispersity in shape achieve superior catalytic properties. The synthesis achieves great control of the nanoparticle's physico-chemical properties by using only biogenic reagents and bromide ions in water while being fast, easy to perform and scalable. The role of the seed morphology is pivotal as Pt single crystal seeds are necessary to achieve low polydispersity in shape and prevent nanorods formation. In addition, electrochemical measurements demonstrate the abundancy of Pd{100} surface facets at a macroscopic level, in line with information inferred from TEM analysis. Quantum density functional theory calculations indicate that the kinetic origin of cubic Pd nanoshapes is facet-selective Pd reduction/deposition on Pd(111). Moreover, we underline both from an experimental and theoretical point of view that bromide alone does not induce nanocube formation without the synergy with formic acid. The superior performance of these highly controlled nanoparticles to perform the catalytic reduction of 4-nitrophenol was proved: polymer-free and surfactant-free Pd nanocubes outperform state-of-the-art materials by a factor >6 and a commercial Pd/C catalyst by more than one order of magnitude.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35796244 DOI: 10.1039/d2nr02278h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale ISSN: 2040-3364 Impact factor: 8.307