Ruthenium-Cobalt Solid-Solution Alloy Nanoparticles for Enhanced Photopromoted Thermocatalytic CO 2 Hydrogenation to Methane.
Yunxiang TangHao WangChan GuoZhengyi YangTingting ZhaoJiurong LiuYanyan JiangWenlong WangQuan ZhangDongshuang WuYufei ZhaoXiao-Dong WenFenglong WangPublished in: ACS nano (2024)
Bimetallic alloy nanoparticles have garnered substantial attention for diverse catalytic applications owing to their abundant active sites and tunable electronic structures, whereas the synthesis of ultrafine alloy nanoparticles with atomic-level homogeneity for bulk-state immiscible couples remains a formidable challenge. Herein, we present the synthesis of Ru x Co 1- x solid-solution alloy nanoparticles (ca. 2 nm) across the entire composition range, for highly efficient, durable, and selective CO 2 hydrogenation to CH 4 under mild conditions. Notably, Ru 0.88 Co 0.12 /TiO 2 and Ru 0.74 Co 0.26 /TiO 2 catalysts, with 12 and 26 atom % of Ru being substituted by Co, exhibit enhanced catalytic activity compared with the monometallic Ru/TiO 2 counterparts both in dark and under light irradiation. The comprehensive experimental investigations and density functional theory calculations unveil that the electronic state of Ru is subtly modulated owing to the intimate interaction between Ru and Co in the alloy nanoparticles, and this effect results in the decline in the CO 2 conversion energy barrier, thus ultimately culminating in an elevated catalytic performance relative to monometallic Ru and Co catalysts. In the photopromoted thermocatalytic process, the photoinduced charge carriers and localized photothermal effect play a pivotal role in facilitating the chemical reaction process, which accounts for the further boosted CO 2 methanation performance.
Keyphrases
- energy transfer
- highly efficient
- density functional theory
- quantum dots
- molecular dynamics
- photodynamic therapy
- molecular dynamics simulations
- working memory
- walled carbon nanotubes
- metal organic framework
- molecular docking
- gold nanoparticles
- high resolution
- room temperature
- radiation induced
- resting state
- crystal structure