Atomic Level Understanding of the Structural Stability and Catalytic Activity of Nanoporous Gold/Titania Cluster Inverse Catalysts at Ambient and High Temperatures.

J Phys Chem Lett

Department of Chemistry, Key Laboratory for Green Organic Synthesis and Application of Hunan Province, Key Laboratory of Environmentally Friendly Chemistry and Applications of Ministry of Education, Xiangtan University, Hunan Province 411105, China.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Nanoporous gold (NPG) has great catalytic abilities at low temperatures but loses effectiveness when temperatures rise due to structural changes.
  • Adding titania nanoparticles to NPG (forming TiO/NPG) can help maintain catalytic performance at higher temperatures, which is studied through CO oxidation reactions.
  • Analysis reveals that TiO/NPG retains its catalytic sites better than plain NPG at 400 °C and that strong interactions between the metal and oxide play a key role in its stability and activity.

Article Abstract

Nanoporous gold (NPG) exhibits exceptional catalytic performance at low temperatures, but its activity declines at elevated temperatures due to structural coarsening. Loading metal oxide nanoparticles onto NPG can enhance its catalytic activity at high temperatures. In this work, we used NPG-supported titania nanoparticles as a model system (denoted as TiO/NPG) to study their catalytic activity at ambient and high temperatures with CO oxidation as a probe reaction by density functional theory (DFT) calculation and ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations. The possible factors that may affect the CO oxidation reaction pathways and energy profiles on the TiO/NPG, such as oxygen vacancies; silver impurities; Mars-van Krevelen (MvK), Eley-Rideal (ER), or trimolecular Eley-Rideal (TER) mechanisms; and catalytic active sites, were comprehensively investigated. The results showed that reaction energy barriers on TiO/NPG were not significantly decreased compared to the pristine NPG, indicating that their catalytic activities at ambient temperature were comparable. At the evaluated temperature (400 °C), the TiO/NPG exhibited superior thermal stability and maintained its active sites, while the NPG reduced active sites due to surface coarsening. The strong oxide-metal interaction (SOMI) effect between the NPG and TiO nanoparticles is found to be a main factor for the high structural stability and catalytic activity at high temperatures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpclett.4c02486DOI Listing

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