Surface Rearrangement and Evaporation Kinetics of Supported Gold Nanoparticle Catalysts
James P. Horwath, Colin Lehman-Chong, Aleksandra Vojvodic, Eric A., Stach

TL;DR
This study combines experimental and computational methods to understand how temperature influences surface restructuring and evaporation in supported gold nanoparticles, revealing mechanisms behind catalyst degradation.
Contribution
It provides an atomistic understanding of surface evolution and evaporation mechanisms in supported gold catalysts across different temperatures.
Findings
Surface morphology changes with temperature affect catalytic stability.
Desorption of low-coordination facets leads to adatom formation.
Evaporation rates vary due to atomic-scale surface dynamics.
Abstract
Heterogeneous catalysts consisting of supported metallic nanoparticles typically derive exceptional catalytic activity from their large proportion of under-coordinated surface sites which promote adsorption of reactant molecules. Simultaneously, these high energy surface configurations are unstable, leading to nanoparticle growth or degradation, and eventually a loss of catalytic activity. Surface morphology of catalytic nanoparticles is paramount to catalytic activity, selectivity, as well as degradation rates, however, it is well-known that harsh reaction conditions can cause the surface structure to change. Still, limited research has focused on understanding the link between nanoparticle surface facets and degradation rates or mechanisms. Here, we study a model Au supported catalyst system over a range of temperatures using a combination of \textit{in situ} Transmission Electron…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCatalytic Processes in Materials Science · nanoparticles nucleation surface interactions · Gold and Silver Nanoparticles Synthesis and Applications
