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Method for Surface Characterization Using Solid-State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy Demonstrated on Nanocrystalline ZnO:Al.

Jan Konrad WiedBenjamin MockenhauptUlrich SchürmannLorenz KienleSebastian MangelsenJanin GlänzerVinicius Ribeiro CelinskiMalte BehrensJörn Schmedt Auf der Günne
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Nanoscale zinc-oxide doped with aluminum ZnO:Al is studied by different techniques targeting surface changes induced by the conditions at which ZnO:Al is used as support material in the catalysis of methanol. While it is well established that a variety of 1 H and 27 Al resonances can be found by solid-state NMR for this material, it was not clear yet which signals are related to species located close to the surface of the material and which to species located in the bulk. To this end, a method is suggested that makes use of a paramagnetically impregnated material to suppress NMR signals close to the particle surface in the blind sphere around the paramagnetic metal atoms. It is shown that it is important to use conditions that guarantee a stable reference system relative to which it can be established whether the coating procedure is conserving the original structure or not. This method, called paramagnetically assisted surface peak assignment, helped to assign the 1 H and 27 Al NMR peaks to the bulk and the surface layer defined by the blind sphere of the paramagnetic atoms. The assignment results are further corroborated by the results from heteronuclear 27 Al{ 1 H} dipolar dephasing experiments, which indicate that the hydrogen atoms are preferentially located in the surface layer and not in the particle core.
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