Abstract

Supported bimetallic nanoparticles (NPs) often display improved catalytic performances (activity and/or selectivity). Yet, structure-activity relationships are difficult to derive due to the multitude of possible compositions, interfaces and alloys. This is notably true for bimetallic NPs used in the selective hydrogenation of CO2 to methanol, where the NPs respond dynamically to the chemical potential of the reactants and products. Herein, we use a combined computational and experimental approach that leverages ab initio Molecular Dynamics (AIMD) and Metadynamics (MTD) in conjunction with in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy, chemisorption and CO-IR, to explore the dynamic structures and interactions with adsorbates under various CO2 hydrogenation conditions in highly active and selective silica-supported PdGa NPs. We find that PdGa alloying generates isolated Pd sites at the NP surface, changing the dominant binding modes of relevant adsorbates compared to pure Pd NPs: CO molecules mainly occupy atop sites and hydrides switch from mainly internal to atop and bridge sites. Under more oxidizing conditions, akin to CO2 hydrogenation, Ga is partially oxidized, forming a GaOX layer on the NP surface, with a partially dealloyed PdGa core and some remaining isolated Pd surface sites. Overall, these bimetallic NPs show high structural dynamics and a variable extent of alloying depending on the adsorbates relevant to CO2 hydrogenation. This work highlights that AIMD/MTD is a powerful approach to elucidate structural dynamics at a single particle level in complex catalytic systems.

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