Spatiotemporal catalytic dynamics within single nanocatalysts revealed by single-molecule microscopy

Peng Chen(Cornell University), Xiaochun Zhou(Cornell University), Nesha May Andoy(Cornell University), Kyu‐Sung Han(Cornell University), Eric Choudhary(Cornell University), Ningmu Zou(Cornell University), Guanqun Chen(Cornell University), Hao Shen(Cornell University)
Chemical Society Reviews
September 18, 2013
Cited by 158

Abstract

This review discusses the latest advances in using single-molecule microscopy of fluorogenic reactions to examine and understand the spatiotemporal catalytic behaviors of single metal nanoparticles of various shapes including pseudospheres, nanorods, and nanoplates. Real-time single-turnover kinetics reveal size-, catalysis-, and metal-dependent temporal activity fluctuations of single pseudospherical nanoparticles (<20 nm in diameter). These temporal catalytic dynamics can be related to nanoparticles' dynamic surface restructuring whose timescales and energetics can be quantified. Single-molecule super-resolution catalysis imaging further enables the direct quantification of catalytic activities at different surface sites (i.e., ends vs. sides, or corner, edge vs. facet regions) on single pseudo 1-D and 2-D nanocrystals, and uncovers linear and radial activity gradients within the same surface facets. These spatial activity patterns within single nanocrystals can be attributed to the inhomogeneous distributions of low-coordination surface sites, including corner, edge, and defect sites, among which the distribution of defect sites is correlated with the nanocrystals' morphology and growth mechanisms. A brief discussion is given on the extension of the single-molecule imaging approach to catalysis that does not involve fluorescent molecules.


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