Controllable Conversion of CO2 on Non-Metallic Gold Clusters.
Dan YangWei PeiSi ZhouJijun ZhaoWeiping DingYan ZhuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Gold nanoparticles in metallic or plasmonic state have been widely used to catalyze homogeneous and heterogeneous reactions. However, the catalytic behavior of gold catalysts in non-metallic or excitonic state remain elusive. Atomically precise Aun clusters (n=number of gold atoms) bridge the gap between non-metallic and metallic catalysts and offer new opportunities for unveiling the hidden properties of gold catalysts in the metallic, transition regime, and non-metallic states. Here, we report the controllable conversion of CO2 over three non-metallic Aun clusters, including Au9 , Au11 , and Au36 , towards different target products: methane produced on Au9 , ethanol on Au11 , and formic acid on Au36 . Structural information encoded in the non-metallic clusters permits a precise correlation of atomic structure with catalytic properties and hence, provides molecular-level insight into distinct reaction channels of CO2 hydrogenation over the three non-metallic Au catalysts.