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Surfactants Used in Colloidal Synthesis Modulate Ni Nanoparticle Surface Evolution for Selective CO 2 Hydrogenation.

Xiangru WeiGrayson C JohnsonYifan YeMeiyang CuiShen-Wei YuYihua RanJun CaiZhi LiuXi ChenWenpei GaoPaul J L BeanWeijie ZhangTommy Yunpu ZhaoFrédéric A PerrasEthan J CrumlinXu ZhangRobert J DavisZhangxiong WuSen Zhang
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Colloidal chemistry holds promise to prepare uniform and size-controllable pre-catalysts; however, it remains a challenge to unveil the atomic-level transition from pre-catalysts to active catalytic surfaces under the reaction conditions to enable the mechanistic design of catalysts. Here, we report an ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy study, coupled with in situ environmental transmission electron microscopy, infrared spectroscopy, and theoretical calculations, to elucidate the surface catalytic sites of colloidal Ni nanoparticles for CO 2 hydrogenation. We show that Ni nanoparticles with phosphine ligands exhibit a distinct surface evolution compared with amine-capped ones, owing to the diffusion of P under oxidative (air) or reductive (CO 2 + H 2 ) gaseous environments at elevated temperatures. The resulting NiP x surface leads to a substantially improved selectivity for CO production, in contrast to the metallic Ni, which favors CH 4 . The further elimination of surface metallic Ni sites by designing multi-step P incorporation achieves unit selectivity of CO in high-rate CO 2 hydrogenation.
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