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Synergizing metal-support interactions and spatial confinement boosts dynamics of atomic nickel for hydrogenations.

Jian GuMinzhen JianLi HuangZhihu SunAowen LiYang PanJiu-Zhong YangWu WenWu ZhouYue LinHui-Juan WangXinyu LiuLeilei WangXianxian ShiXiaohui HuangLina CaoSi ChenXusheng ZhengHaibin PanJun-Fa ZhuShiqiang WeiWei-Xue LiJunling Lu
Published in: Nature nanotechnology (2021)
Atomically dispersed metal catalysts maximize atom efficiency and display unique catalytic properties compared with regular metal nanoparticles. However, achieving high reactivity while preserving high stability at appreciable loadings remains challenging. Here we solve the challenge by synergizing metal-support interactions and spatial confinement, which enables the fabrication of highly loaded atomic nickel (3.1 wt%) along with dense atomic copper grippers (8.1 wt%) on a graphitic carbon nitride support. For the semi-hydrogenation of acetylene in excess ethylene, the fabricated catalyst shows extraordinary catalytic performance in terms of activity, selectivity and stability-far superior to supported atomic nickel alone in the absence of a synergizing effect. Comprehensive characterization and theoretical calculations reveal that the active nickel site confined in two stable hydroxylated copper grippers dynamically changes by breaking the interfacial nickel-support bonds on reactant adsorption and making these bonds on product desorption. Such a dynamic effect confers high catalytic performance, providing an avenue to rationally design efficient, stable and highly loaded, yet atomically dispersed, catalysts.
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