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Atomically Thick Oxide Overcoating Stimulates Low-Temperature Reactive Metal-Support Interactions for Enhanced Catalysis.

Xinyu LiuQingqing GuYafeng ZhangXiaoyan XuHengwei WangZhihu SunLina CaoQimeng SunLulu XuLeilei WangShang LiShiqiang WeiBing YangJunling Lu
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Reactive metal-support interactions (RMSIs) induce the formation of bimetallic alloys and offer an effective way to tune the electronic and geometric properties of metal sites for advanced catalysis. However, RMSIs often require high-temperature reductions (>500 °C), which significantly limits the tuning of bimetallic compositional varieties. Here, we report that an atomically thick Ga 2 O 3 coating of Pd nanoparticles enables the initiation of RMSIs at a much lower temperature of ∼250 °C. State-of-the-art microscopic and in situ spectroscopic studies disclose that low-temperature RMSIs initiate the formation of rarely reported Ga-rich PdGa alloy phases, distinct from the Pd 2 Ga phase formed in traditional Pd/Ga 2 O 3 catalysts after high-temperature reduction. In the CO 2 hydrogenation reaction, the Ga-rich alloy phases impressively boost the formation of methanol and dimethyl ether ∼5 times higher than that of Pd/Ga 2 O 3 . In situ infrared spectroscopy reveals that the Ga-rich phases greatly favor formate formation as well as its subsequent hydrogenation, thus leading to high productivity.
Keyphrases
  • pet ct
  • high temperature
  • molecular docking
  • metal organic framework
  • ionic liquid
  • highly efficient
  • walled carbon nanotubes
  • electron transfer