Abstract

Rational catalyst design is crucial toward achieving more energy-efficient and sustainable catalytic processes. Understanding and modeling catalytic reaction pathways and kinetics require atomic level knowledge of the active sites. These structures often change dynamically during reactions and are difficult to decipher. A prototypical example is the hydrogen-deuterium exchange reaction catalyzed by dilute Pd-in-Au alloy nanoparticles. From a combination of catalytic activity measurements, machine learning-enabled spectroscopic analysis, and first-principles based kinetic modeling, we demonstrate that the active species are surface Pd ensembles containing only a few (from 1 to 3) Pd atoms. These species simultaneously explain the observed X-ray spectra and equate the experimental and theoretical values of the apparent activation energy. Remarkably, we find that the catalytic activity can be tuned on demand by controlling the size of the Pd ensembles through catalyst pretreatment. Our data-driven multimodal approach enables decoding of reactive structures in complex and dynamic alloy catalysts.

Highlights

  • Rational catalyst design is crucial toward achieving more energy-efficient and sustainable catalytic processes

  • The dilute alloy Pd8Au92/ RCT-SiO2 catalyst was synthesized according to the established procedures[33] (Methods)

  • From electron microscopy and energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) measurements (Methods), the majority of Pd is homogeneously mixed with Au prior to any treatments and catalysis (Supplementary Fig. 1)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Rational catalyst design is crucial toward achieving more energy-efficient and sustainable catalytic processes. To understand these structural changes more precisely, quantitative analysis was performed using partial coordination numbers (CNs) (CPdÀPd and CPdÀAu) obtained from the NNXANES inversion method[6] (Fig. 2d; Methods) and conventional EXAFS fitting (Supplementary Fig. 4; Methods).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call