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Angewandte Chemie | 2012

Hydrogen‐Evolution Catalysts Based on Non‐Noble Metal Nickel–Molybdenum Nitride Nanosheets

Wei-Fu Chen; Kotaro Sasaki; Chao Ma; Anatoly I. Frenkel; Nebojsa Marinkovic; James T. Muckerman; Yimei Zhu; Radoslav R. Adzic

Hydrogen production through splitting of water has attracted great scientific interest because of its relevance to renewable energy storage and its potential for providing energy without the emission of carbon dioxide. Electrocatalytic systems for H2 generation typically incorporate noble metals such as Pt in the catalysts because of their low overpotential and fast kinetics for driving the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). However, the high costs and limited world-wide supply of these noble metals make their application in viable commercial processes unattractive. Several non-noble metal materials, such as transition-metal chalcogenides, carbides, and complexes as well as metal alloys have been widely investigated recently, and characterized as catalysts and supports for application in the evolution of hydrogen. Nitrides of early transition-metals have been shown to have excellent catalytic activities in a variety of reactions. One of the primary interests in the applications of nitrides in these reactions was to use them in conjunction with low-cost alternative metals to replace group VIII noble metals. For example, the function of molybdenum nitride as a catalyst for hydrocarbon hydrogenolysis resembles that of platinum. The catalytic and electronic properties of transition-metal nitrides are governed by their bulk and surface structure and stoichiometry. While there is some information concerning the effect of the bulk composition on the catalytic properties of this material, there is currently little known about the effects of the surface nanostructure. Nickel and nickel–molybdenum are known electrocatalysts for hydrogen production in alkaline electrolytes, and in the bulk form they exhibited exchange current densities between 10 6 and 10 4 Acm , compared to 10 3 Acm 2 for Pt. Jaksic et al. postulated a hypo-hyper-d-electronic interactive effect between Ni and Mo that yields the synergism for the HER. Owing to their poor corrosion stability, few studies in acidic media have been reported.With the objective of exploiting the decrease in the overpotential by carrying out the HER in acidic media, we have developed a low-cost, stable, and active molybdenum-nitride-based electrocatalyst for the HER. Guided by the “volcano plot” in which the activity for the evolution of hydrogen as a function of the M H bond strength exhibits an ascending branch followed by a descending branch, peaking at Pt, we designed a material on the molecular scale combining nickel, which binds H weakly, with molybdenum, which binds H strongly. Here we report the first synthesis of NiMo nitride nanosheets on a carbon support (NiMoNx/C), and demonstrate the high HER electrocatalytic activity of the resulting NiMoNx/C catalyst with low overpotential and small Tafel slope. The NiMoNx/C catalyst was synthesized by reduction of a carbon-supported ammonium molybdate [(NH4)6Mo7O24·4H2O] and nickel nitrate (Ni(NO3)2·4H2O) mixture in a tubular oven in H2 at 400 8C, and subsequent reaction with NH3 at 700 8C. During this process, the (NH4)6Mo7O24 and Ni(NO3)2 precursors were reduced to NiMo metal particles by H2, and then they were mildly transformed to NiMoNx nanosheets by reaction with ammonia. The atomic ratio of Ni/Mo was 1/4.7 determined by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) on the NiMoNx/ C sample. The transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images, as shown in Figure 1a, display NiMo particles that are mainly spherical. The high-resolution TEM image, as shown in the inset of Figure 1a, corroborated the presence of an amorphous 3 to 5 nm Ni/Mo oxide layer (see Figure S4 in the Supporting Information for resolved image), whereas NiMoNx is characterized by thin, flat, and flaky stacks composed of nanosheets with high radial-axial ratios (Figure 1b and Figure S5 in the Supporting Information for a magnified image). Figure 1c shows that some of the nanosheets lay flat on the graphite carbon (as indicated by the black arrows), and some have folded edges that show different layers of NiMoNx sheets (white arrows). The thickness of the sheets ranged from 4 to 15 nm. The average stacking number of sheets measured from Figure 1b is about [*] Dr. W.-F. Chen, Dr. K. Sasaki, Dr. J. T. Muckerman, Dr. R. R. Adzic Chemistry Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory Upton, NY 11973 (USA) E-mail: [email protected]


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Insights into the Interplay of Lewis and Brønsted Acid Catalysts in Glucose and Fructose Conversion to 5-(Hydroxymethyl)furfural and Levulinic Acid in Aqueous Media

Vinit Choudhary; Samir H. Mushrif; Christopher Ho; Andrzej Anderko; Vladimiros Nikolakis; Nebojsa Marinkovic; Anatoly I. Frenkel; Stanley I. Sandler; Dionisios G. Vlachos

5-(Hydroxymethyl)furfural (HMF) and levulinic acid production from glucose in a cascade of reactions using a Lewis acid (CrCl3) catalyst together with a Brønsted acid (HCl) catalyst in aqueous media is investigated. It is shown that CrCl3 is an active Lewis acid catalyst in glucose isomerization to fructose, and the combined Lewis and Brønsted acid catalysts perform the isomerization and dehydration/rehydration reactions. A CrCl3 speciation model in conjunction with kinetics results indicates that the hydrolyzed Cr(III) complex [Cr(H2O)5OH](2+) is the most active Cr species in glucose isomerization and probably acts as a Lewis acid-Brønsted base bifunctional site. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy and Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics simulations indicate a strong interaction between the Cr cation and the glucose molecule whereby some water molecules are displaced from the first coordination sphere of Cr by the glucose to enable ring-opening and isomerization of glucose. Additionally, complex interactions between the two catalysts are revealed: Brønsted acidity retards aldose-to-ketose isomerization by decreasing the equilibrium concentration of [Cr(H2O)5OH](2+). In contrast, Lewis acidity increases the overall rate of consumption of fructose and HMF compared to Brønsted acid catalysis by promoting side reactions. Even in the absence of HCl, hydrolysis of Cr(III) decreases the solution pH, and this intrinsic Brønsted acidity drives the dehydration and rehydration reactions. Yields of 46% levulinic acid in a single phase and 59% HMF in a biphasic system have been achieved at moderate temperatures by combining CrCl3 and HCl.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Shape-Dependent Catalytic Properties of Pt Nanoparticles

S. Mostafa; Farzad Behafarid; Jason R. Croy; Luis K. Ono; Long Li; Judith C. Yang; Anatoly I. Frenkel; Beatriz Roldan Cuenya

Tailoring the chemical reactivity of nanomaterials at the atomic level is one of the most important challenges in catalysis research. In order to achieve this elusive goal, fundamental understanding of the geometric and electronic structure of these complex systems at the atomic level must be obtained. This article reports the influence of the nanoparticle shape on the reactivity of Pt nanocatalysts supported on γ-Al(2)O(3). Nanoparticles with analogous average size distributions (∼0.8-1 nm), but with different shapes, synthesized by inverse micelle encapsulation, were found to display distinct reactivities for the oxidation of 2-propanol. A correlation between the number of undercoordinated atoms at the nanoparticle surface and the onset temperature for 2-propanol oxidation was observed, demonstrating that catalytic properties can be controlled through shape-selective synthesis.


ACS Nano | 2009

Structural and architectural evaluation of bimetallic nanoparticles: a case study of Pt-Ru core-shell and alloy nanoparticles.

Selim Alayoglu; Peter Y. Zavalij; Bryan W. Eichhorn; Qi Wang; Anatoly I. Frenkel; Peter Chupas

A comprehensive structural/architectural evaluation of the PtRu (1:1) alloy and Ru@Pt core-shell nanoparticles (NPs) provides spatially resolved structural information on sub-5 nm NPs. A combination of extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS), X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES), pair distribution function (PDF) analyses, Debye function simulations of X-ray diffraction (XRD), and field emission transmission electron microscopy/energy dispersive spectroscopy (FE-TEM/EDS) analyses provides complementary information used to construct a detailed picture of the core/shell and alloy nanostructures. The 4.4 nm PtRu (1:1) alloys are crystalline homogeneous random alloys with little twinning in a typical face-centered cubic (fcc) cell. The Pt atoms are predominantly metallic, whereas the Ru atoms are partially oxidized and are presumably located on the NP surface. The 4.0 nm Ru@Pt NPs have highly distorted hcp Ru cores that are primarily in the metallic state but show little order beyond 8 A. In contrast, the 1-2 monolayer thick Pt shells are relatively crystalline but are slightly distorted (compressed) relative to bulk fcc Pt. The homo- and heterometallic coordination numbers and bond lengths are equal to those predicted by the model cluster structure, showing that the Ru and Pt metals remain phase-separated in the core and shell components and that the interface between the core and shell is quite normal.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Correlating Particle Size and Shape of Supported Ru/γ-Al2O3 Catalysts with NH3 Decomposition Activity

Ayman M. Karim; Vinay Prasad; Giannis Mpourmpakis; William W. Lonergan; Anatoly I. Frenkel; Jingguang G. Chen; Dionisios G. Vlachos

While ammonia synthesis and decomposition on Ru are known to be structure-sensitive reactions, the effect of particle shape on controlling the particle size giving maximum turnover frequency (TOF) is not understood. By controlling the catalyst pretreatment conditions, we have varied the particle size and shape of supported Ru/gamma-Al(2)O(3) catalysts. The Ru particle shape was reconstructed by combining microscopy, chemisorption, and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) techniques. We show that the particle shape can change from a round one, for smaller particles, to an elongated, flat one, for larger particles, with suitable pretreatment. Density functional theory calculations suggest that the calcination most likely leads to planar structures. We show for the first time that the number of active (here B(5)) sites is highly dependent on particle shape and increases with particle size up to 7 nm for flat nanoparticles. The maximum TOF (based on total exposed Ru atoms) and number of active (B(5)) sites occur at approximately 7 nm for elongated nanoparticles compared to at approximately 1.8-3 nm for hemispherical nanoparticles. A complete, first-principles based microkinetic model is constructed that can quantitatively describe for the first time the effect of varying particle size and shape on Ru activity and provide further support of the characterization results. In very small nanoparticles, particle size polydispersity (due to the presence of larger particles) appears to be responsible for the observed activity.


Catalysis Letters | 2003

REDUCTION OF CUO IN H2: IN SITU TIME-RESOLVED XRD STUDIES

José A. Rodriguez; Jae Y. Kim; Jonathan C. Hanson; M. Pérez; Anatoly I. Frenkel

CuO is used as a catalyst or catalyst precursor in many chemical reactions that involve hydrogen as a reactant or product. A systematic study of the reaction of H2 with pure powders and films of CuO was carried out using in situ time-resolved X-ray diffraction (XRD) and surface science techniques. Oxide reduction was observed at atmospheric H2 pressures and elevated temperatures (150-300 °C), but only after an induction period. High temperature or H2 pressure and a large concentration of defects in the oxide substrate lead to a decrease in the magnitude of the induction time. Under normal process conditions, in situ time-resolved XRD shows that Cu1+ is not a stable intermediate in the reduction of CuO. Instead of a sequential reduction (CuO → Cu4O3 → Cu2O → Cu), a direct CuO → Cu transformation occurs. To facilitate the generation of Cu1+ in a catalytic process one can limit the supply of H2 or mix this molecule with molecules that can act as oxidant agents (O2, H2O). The behavior of CuO-based catalysts in the synthesis of methanol and methanol steam reforming is discussed in the light of these results.


Nature | 2008

Evidence for a terminal Pt( iv )-oxo complex exhibiting diverse reactivity

Elena Poverenov; Irena Efremenko; Anatoly I. Frenkel; Yehoshoa Ben-David; Linda J. W. Shimon; Gregory Leitus; Leonid Konstantinovski; Jan M. L. Martin; David Milstein

Terminal oxo complexes of transition metals have critical roles in various biological and chemical processes. For example, the catalytic oxidation of organic molecules, some oxidative enzymatic transformations, and the activation of dioxygen on metal surfaces are all thought to involve oxo complexes. Moreover, they are believed to be key intermediates in the photocatalytic oxidation of water to give molecular oxygen, a topic of intensive global research aimed at artificial photosynthesis and water splitting. The terminal oxo ligand is a strong π-electron donor, so it readily forms stable complexes with high-valent early transition metals. As the d orbitals are filled up with valence electrons, the terminal oxo ligand becomes destabilized. Here we present evidence for a dn (n > 5) terminal oxo complex that is not stabilized by an electron withdrawing ligand framework. This d6 Pt(iv) complex exhibits reactivity as an inter- and intramolecular oxygen donor and as an electrophile. In addition, it undergoes a water activation process leading to a terminal dihydroxo complex, which may be relevant to the mechanism of catalytic reactions such as water oxidation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

PtMo Alloy and MoOx@Pt Core−Shell Nanoparticles as Highly CO-Tolerant Electrocatalysts

Zhufang Liu; Jenny E. Hu; Qi Wang; Karen Gaskell; Anatoly I. Frenkel; Gregory S. Jackson; Bryan W. Eichhorn

PtMo alloy and MoO(x)@Pt core-shell nanoparticles (NPs) were successfully synthesized by a chemical coreduction and sequential chemical reduction method, respectively. Both the carbon-supported alloy and core-shell NPs show substantially higher CO tolerance, compared to the commercialized E-TEK PtRu alloy and Pt catalyst. These novel nanocatalysts can be potentially used as highly CO-tolerant anode electrocatalysts in proton exchange membrane fuel cells.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

The Emergence of Nonbulk Properties in Supported Metal Clusters: Negative Thermal Expansion and Atomic Disorder in Pt Nanoclusters Supported on γ-Al2O3

Sergio I. Sanchez; Laurent D. Menard; Ariella Bram; Joo H. Kang; Matthew W. Small; Ralph G. Nuzzo; Anatoly I. Frenkel

The structural dynamics-cluster size and adsorbate-dependent thermal behaviors of the metal-metal (M-M) bond distances and interatomic order-of Pt nanoclusters supported on a gamma-Al(2)O(3) are described. Data from scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) studies reveal that these materials possess a dramatically nonbulklike nature. Under an inert atmosphere small, subnanometer Pt/gamma-Al(2)O(3) clusters exhibit marked relaxations of the M-M bond distances, negative thermal expansion (NTE) with an average linear thermal expansion coefficient alpha = (-2.4 +/- 0.4) x 10(-5) K(-1), large static disorder and dynamical bond (interatomic) disorder that is poorly modeled within the constraints of classical theory. The data further demonstrate a significant temperature-dependence to the electronic structure of the Pt clusters, thereby suggesting the necessity of an active model to describe the cluster/support interactions mediating the clusters dynamical structure. The quantitative dependences of these nonbulklike behaviors on cluster size (0.9 to 2.9 nm), ambient atmosphere (He, 4% H(2) in He or 20% O(2) in He) and support identity (gamma-Al(2)O(3) or carbon black) are systematically investigated. We show that the nonbulk structural, electronic and dynamical perturbations are most dramatically evidenced for the smallest clusters. The adsorption of hydrogen on the clusters leads to an increase of the Pt-Pt bondlengths (due to a lifting of the surface relaxation) and significant attenuation of the disorder present in the system. Oxidation of these same clusters has the opposite effect, leading to an increase in Pt-Pt bond strain and subsequent enhancement in nonbulklike thermal properties. The structural and electronic properties of Pt nanoclusters supported on carbon black contrast markedly with those of the Pt/gamma-Al(2)O(3) samples in that neither NTE nor comparable levels of atomic disorder are observed. The Pt/C nanoclusters do exhibit, however, both size- and adsorbate-induced trends in bond strain that are similar to those of their Pt/gamma-Al(2)O(3) analogues. Taken together, the data highlight the significant role that electronic effects--specifically charge exchange due to both metal-support and metal-adsorbate interactions--play in mediating the structural dynamics of supported nanoscale metal clusters that are broadly used as heterogeneous catalysts.


Zeitschrift Fur Kristallographie | 2007

Solving the 3D structure of metal nanoparticles

Anatoly I. Frenkel

We discuss methods of Extended X-ray Absorption Fine-Structure (EXAFS) analysis that provide three-dimensional structural characterization of metal nanoparticles, both mono- and bi-metallic. For the bimetallic alloys, we use short range order measurements to discriminate between random and non-random inter-particle distributions of atoms. We also discuss the application of EXAFS to heterogeneous nanoparticle systems.

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Judith C. Yang

University of Pittsburgh

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Jonathan C. Hanson

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Richard M. Crooks

University of Texas at Austin

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Igor Lubomirsky

Weizmann Institute of Science

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