Abstract

Carbon-supported late transition-metal nanoparticles are promising catalysts and electrocatalysts for wide-ranging applications. However, experimental investigations of the bonding energetics of metal nanoparticles on carbon supports are very limited. Here, we report heats of adsorption of Pd vapor deposited onto single-layer graphene(0001) supported on Ni(111) at 100 and 300 K as Pd grows particles of well-defined size in the range from three atom clusters to 6 nm diameter. Sizes were determined from He+ low-energy ion scattering (LEIS). In this size range, the differential heat of Pd adsorption increases from 228 kJ/mol to within 10 kJ/mol of the heat of sublimation of bulk Pd (377 kJ/mol). The chemical potential of metal atoms in these nanoparticles as a function of average particle size was determined from these results. The adhesion energy at the Pd/graphene(0001)/Ni(111) interface was extracted from these data and found to be 3.5 J/m2 for the largest Pd particles. For the three metal elements that have now been studied (Pd, Ni, and Ag), we found an increase in metal/graphene(0001)/Ni(111) adhesion energy with metal carbophilicity, which we defined here as the heat of C atom adsorption on that metal’s (111) surface estimated from published density functional theory calculations.

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