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Resolving multifrequential oscillations and nanoscale interfacet communication in single-particle catalysis.

Yuri SuchorskiJohannes ZeiningerS BuhrMaximilian RaabMichael Stöger-PollachJohannes BernardiHenrik GrönbeckGünther Rupprechter
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2021)
In heterogeneous catalysis research, the reactivity of individual nanofacets of single particles is typically not resolved. We applied in situ field electron microscopy to the apex of a curved rhodium crystal (radius of 650 nanometers), providing high spatial (~2 nanometers) and time resolution (~2 milliseconds) of oscillatory catalytic hydrogen oxidation, to image adsorbed species and reaction fronts on the individual facets. Using ionized water as the imaging species, the active sites were directly imaged with field ion microscopy. The catalytic behavior of differently structured nanofacets and the extent of coupling between them were monitored individually. We observed limited interfacet coupling, entrainment, frequency locking, and reconstruction-induced collapse of spatial coupling. The experimental results are backed up by microkinetic modeling of time-dependent oxygen species coverages and oscillation frequencies.
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