Facet Engineering of Nanoceria for Enzyme-Mimetic Catalysis.
Min ChenXiaocheng ZhouCan XiongTongwei YuanWenyu WangYafei ZhaoZhenggang XueWenxin GuoQiuping WangHuijuan WangYa-Fei LiHuang ZhouYuen WuPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2022)
Nanomaterials with natural enzyme-mimicking characteristics have aroused extensive attention in various fields owing to their economical price, ease of large-scale production, and environmental resistance. Previous investigations have demonstrated that composition, size, shape, and surface modification play important roles in the enzymelike activity of nanomaterials; however, a fundamental understanding of the crystal facet effect, which determines surface energy or surface reactivity, has rarely been reported. Herein, fluorite cubic CeO 2 nanocrystals with controllably exposed {111}, {100}, or {110} facets are fabricated as proof-of-concept candidates to study the facet effect on the peroxidase-mimetic activity. Both experiments and theoretical results show that {110}-dominated CeO 2 nanorods (CeO 2 NR) possess the highest peroxidase-mimetic activity due to the richest defects on their surfaces, which are beneficial to capture metal atoms to further enrich their artificial enzymatic functionality for cascade catalysis. For instance, the introduction of atomically dispersed Au on CeO 2 NR surfaces not only enhances the peroxidase activity but also endows the obtained catalyst with glucose oxidase (GO x )-mimicking activity, which realizes enzyme-free cascade reactions for glucose colorimetric detection. This work not only provides an understanding for crystal facet engineering of nanomaterials to enhance the catalytic activity but also opens up a new way for the design of biomimetic nanomaterials with multiple functions.