Abstract

Supported Pt nanoparticles are used extensively in chemical processes, including for fuel cells, fuels, pollution control and hydrogenation reactions. Atomic-level deactivation mechanisms play a critical role in the loss of performance. In this original research paper, we introduce real-time in-situ visualization and quantitative analysis of dynamic atom-by-atom sintering and stability of model Pt nanoparticles on a carbon support, under controlled chemical reaction conditions of temperature and continuously flowing gas. We use a novel environmental scanning transmission electron microscope with single-atom resolution, to understand the mechanisms. Our results track the areal density of dynamic single atoms on the support between nanoparticles and attached to them; both as migrating species in performance degradation and as potential new independent active species. We demonstrate that the decay of smaller nanoparticles is initiated by a local lack of single atoms; while a post decay increase in single-atom density suggests anchoring sites on the substrate before aggregation to larger particles. The analyses reveal a relationship between the density and mobility of single atoms, particle sizes and their nature in the immediate neighbourhood. The results are combined with practical catalysts important in technological processes. The findings illustrate the complex nature of sintering and deactivation. They are used to generate new fundamental insights into nanoparticle sintering dynamics at the single-atom level, important in the development of efficient supported nanoparticle systems for improved chemical processes and novel single-atom catalysis.This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Dynamic in situ microscopy relating structure and function’.

Highlights

  • Supported noble metal nanoparticles are used widely as heterogeneous catalysts for chemical processes in industry for the production of fuels, fuel cells, chemicals, healthcare and in pollution control, important for world economic development and sustainability

  • The focus of our work reported in this paper is to obtain an improved understanding of the dynamic relationship between the effect and the cause involving single-atom density and mobility, in a Pt/C nanoparticle system under controlled reaction conditions in a flowing gas environment at operating temperatures, using the environmental scanning transmission electron microscope (ESTEM) at the single-atom level

  • The findings have revealed an important relationship between the single-atom density and changes in the particle size

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Summary

Introduction

Supported noble metal nanoparticles are used widely as heterogeneous catalysts for chemical processes in industry for the production of fuels, fuel cells, chemicals, healthcare and in pollution control, important for world economic development and sustainability. As the nature of the active reaction site of the metal nanoparticle, along with the processes by which the particle sinters and deactivates, have been shown to change both in magnitude and mechanism with the reaction environment [4,22,27,28,29,30], it is of fundamental importance to activate, react, observe and analyse nanoparticle systems in-situ, in real time, under controlled continuous gas flow reaction conditions at operating temperatures.

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