CO Oxidation Catalysed by Pd-based Bimetallic Nanoalloys
Dennis Palagin, Jonathan P. K. Doye

TL;DR
This study uses density functional theory to explore how the geometry of Pd-based bimetallic nanoalloys influences CO oxidation efficiency, highlighting the potential for geometric tuning to improve catalyst performance.
Contribution
It demonstrates how geometric configurations of nanoalloy clusters affect reaction barriers and shows that substituting Pd with Ag can enhance catalytic properties.
Findings
Geometry changes can lead to high energy barriers in CO oxidation.
Substituting Pd with Ag improves catalytic properties.
Au substitution does not enhance catalysis due to weak hybridization.
Abstract
Density functional theory based global geometry optimization has been used to demonstrate the crucial influence of the geometry of the catalytic cluster on the energy barriers for the CO oxidation reaction over Pd-based bimetallic nanoalloys. We show that dramatic geometry change between the reaction intermediates can lead to very high energy barriers and thus be prohibitive for the whole process. This introduces challenges for both the design of new catalysts, and theoretical methods employed. On the theory side, a careful choice of geometric configurations of all reaction intermediates is crucial for an adequate description of a possible reaction path. From the point of view of the catalyst design, the cluster geometry can be controlled by adjusting the level of interaction between the cluster and the dopant metal, as well as between the adsorbate molecules and the catalyst cluster by…
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