Size-Dependent Catalytic Activity and Dynamics of Gold Nanoparticles at the Single-Molecule LevelXiaochun Zhou, Weilin Xu, Guokun Liu et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2009 Nanoparticles are important catalysts for petroleum processing, energy conversion, and pollutant removal. As compared to their bulk counterparts, their often superior or new catalytic properties result from their nanometer size, which gives them increased surface-to-volume ratios and chemical potentials. The size of nanoparticles is thus pivotal for their catalytic properties. Here, we use single-molecule fluorescence microscopy to study the size-dependent catalytic activity and dynamics of spherical Au-nanoparticles under ambient solution conditions. By monitoring the catalysis of individual Au-nanoparticles of three different sizes in real time with single-turnover resolution, we observe clear size-dependent activities in both the catalytic product formation reaction and the product dissociation reaction. Within a model of classical thermodynamics, these size-dependent activities of Au-nanoparticles can be accounted for by the changes in the adsorption free energies of the substrate resazurin and the product resorufin because of the nanosize effect. We also observe size-dependent differential selectivity of the Au-nanoparticles between two parallel product dissociation pathways, with larger nanoparticles less selective between the two pathways. The particle size also strongly influences the surface-restructuring-coupled catalytic dynamics; both the catalysis-induced and the spontaneous dynamic surface restructuring occur more readily for smaller Au-nanoparticles due to their higher surface energies. Using a simple thermodynamic model, we analyze the catalysis- and size-dependent dynamic surface restructuring quantitatively; the results provide estimates on the activation energies and time scales of spontaneous dynamic surface restructuring that are fundamental to heterogeneous catalysis in both the nano- and the macro-scale. This study further exemplifies the power of the single-molecule approach in probing the intricate workings of nanoscale catalysts.
High-quality hydrogen from the catalyzed decomposition of formic acid by Pd–Au/C and Pd–Ag/CXiaochun Zhou, Yunjie Huang, Wei Xing et al.|Chemical Communications|2008 Pd-Au/C and Pd-Ag/C were found to have a unique characteristic of evolving high-quality hydrogen dramatically and steadily from the catalyzed decomposition of liquid formic acid at convenient temperature, and further this was improved by the addition of CeO(2)(H(2)O)(x).
Quantitative super-resolution imaging uncovers reactivity patterns on single nanocatalystsXiaochun Zhou, Nesha May Andoy, Guokun Liu et al.|Nature Nanotechnology|2012 Novel PdAu@Au/C Core−Shell Catalyst: Superior Activity and Selectivity in Formic Acid Decomposition for Hydrogen GenerationYunjie Huang, Xiaochun Zhou, Min Yin et al.|Chemistry of Materials|2010 A novel PdAu bimetallic catalyst with a PdAu@Au core−shell nanostructure supported on carbon was facilely synthesized by a simultaneous reduction method without using any stabilizer. The structure was characterized by cyclic voltammetry, X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and high-angle annular dark-field scanning TEM combining with X-ray energy-dispersive spectroscopy. The obtained catalyst was applied in hydrogen generation from formic acid decomposition. Results show that the structured bimetallic catalyst possesses superior activity, high selectivity, and stability at low temperature. The reforming gas from formic acid decomposition contains only 30 ppm of CO and can be used directly in fuel cell.
Single-Molecule Catalysis Mapping Quantifies Site-Specific Activity and Uncovers Radial Activity Gradient on Single 2D NanocrystalsNesha May Andoy, Xiaochun Zhou, Eric Choudhary et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2013 Shape-controlled metal nanocrystals are a new generation of nanoscale catalysts. Depending on their shapes, these nanocrystals exhibit various surface facets, and the assignments of their surface facets have routinely been used to rationalize or predict their catalytic activity in a variety of chemical transformations. Recently we discovered that for 1-dimensional (1D) nanocrystals (Au nanorods), the catalytic activity is not constant along the same side facets of single nanorods but rather differs significantly and further shows a gradient along its length, which we attributed to an underlying gradient of surface defect density resulting from their linear decay in growth rate during synthesis (Nat. Nanotechnol.2012, 7, 237-241). Here we report that this behavior also extends to 2D nanocrystals, even for a different catalytic reaction. By using super-resolution fluorescence microscopy to map out the locations of catalytic events within individual triangular and hexagonal Au nanoplates in correlation with scanning electron microscopy, we find that the catalytic activity within the flat {111} surface facet of a Au nanoplate exhibits a 2D radial gradient from the center toward the edges. We propose that this activity gradient results from a growth-dependent surface defect distribution. We also quantify the site-specific activity at different regions within a nanoplate: The corner regions have the highest activity, followed by the edge regions and then the flat surface facets. These discoveries highlight the spatial complexity of catalytic activity at the nanoscale as well as the interplay amid nanocrystal growth, morphology, and surface defects in determining nanocatalyst properties.