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Dive into the research topics where Bert D. Chandler is active.

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Featured researches published by Bert D. Chandler.


Science | 2014

The critical role of water at the gold-titania interface in catalytic CO oxidation

Johnny Saavedra; Hieu A. Doan; Christopher J. Pursell; Lars C. Grabow; Bert D. Chandler

Easier oxidation over gold with added water Gold adsorbed on metal oxides is an excellent catalyst for the room-temperature oxidation of CO to CO2. However, there has been continuing disagreement between different studies on the key aspects of this catalyst. Saveeda et al. now show through kinetics and infrared spectroscopy that the presence of water can lower the reaction activation barrier by enabling OOH groups to form from adsorbed oxygen (see the Perspective by Mullen and Mullins). The OOH then reacts readily with CO. It thus seems that the main role of oxide support and its interface with the metal is in activating water, but that the steps of the reaction that involve CO occur on gold. Science, this issue p. 1599; see also p. 1564 Adsorbed water enables proton-transfer steps that lower the activation barrier for carbon monoxide oxidation. [Also see Perspective by Mullen and Mullins] We provide direct evidence of a water-mediated reaction mechanism for room-temperature CO oxidation over Au/TiO2 catalysts. A hydrogen/deuterium kinetic isotope effect of nearly 2 implicates O-H(D) bond breaking in the rate-determining step. Kinetics and in situ infrared spectroscopy experiments showed that the coverage of weakly adsorbed water on TiO2 largely determines catalyst activity by changing the number of active sites. Density functional theory calculations indicated that proton transfer at the metal-support interface facilitates O2 binding and activation; the resulting Au-OOH species readily reacts with adsorbed Au-CO, yielding Au-COOH. Au-COOH decomposition involves proton transfer to water and was suggested to be rate determining. These results provide a unified explanation to disparate literature results, clearly defining the mechanistic roles of water, support OH groups, and the metal-support interface.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Kinetic Evaluation of Highly Active Supported Gold Catalysts Prepared from Monolayer-Protected Clusters: An Experimental Michaelis-Menten Approach for Determining the Oxygen Binding Constant during CO Oxidation Catalysis

Cormac G. Long; John D. Gilbertson; Ganesh Vijayaraghavan; Keith J. Stevenson; Christopher J. Pursell; Bert D. Chandler

Thiol monolayer-protected Au clusters (MPCs) were prepared using dendrimer templates, deposited onto a high-surface-area titania, and then the thiol stabilizers were removed under H2/N2. The resulting Au catalysts were characterized with transmission electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and infrared spectroscopy of adsorbed CO. The Au catalysts prepared via this route displayed minimal particle agglomeration during the deposition and activation steps. Structural data obtained from the physical characterization of the Au catalysts were comparable to features exhibited from a traditionally prepared standard Au catalyst obtained from the World Gold Council (WGC). A differential kinetic study of CO oxidation catalysis by the MPC-prepared Au and the standard WGC catalyst showed that these two catalyst systems have essentially the same reaction order and Arrhenius apparent activation energies (28 kJ/mol). However, the MPC-prepared Au catalyst shows 50% greater activity for CO oxidation. Using a Michaelis-Menten approach, the oxygen binding constants for the two catalyst systems were determined and found to be essentially the same within experimental error. To our knowledge, this kinetic evaluation is the first experimental determination of oxygen binding by supported Au nanoparticle catalysts under working conditions. The values for the oxygen binding equilibrium constant obtained from the Michaelis-Menten treatment (ca. 29-39) are consistent with ultra-high-vacuum measurements on model catalyst systems and support density functional theory calculations for oxygen binding at corner or edge atoms on Au nanoparticles and clusters.


ChemInform | 2006

Dendrimer-Encapsulated Bimetallic Nanoparticles: Synthesis, Characterization, and Applications to Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Catalysis

Bert D. Chandler; John D. Gilbertson

We review the preparation, characterization, and properties of dendrimer-templated bimetallic nanoparticles. Polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers can be used to template and stabilize a wide variety of mono- and bimetallic nanoparticles. Depending on the specific requirements of the metal system, a variety of synthetic methodologies are available for preparing nanoparticles with diameters on the order of 1–3 nm with narrow particle size distributions. The resulting dendrimer-encapsulated nanoparticles, or DENs, have been physically characterized with electron microscopy techniques, as well as UV-visible and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies.


Nature Chemistry | 2016

Controlling activity and selectivity using water in the Au-catalysed preferential oxidation of CO in H2

Johnny Saavedra; Todd Whittaker; Zhifeng Chen; Christopher J. Pursell; Robert M. Rioux; Bert D. Chandler

Industrial hydrogen production through methane steam reforming exceeds 50 million tons annually and accounts for 2-5% of global energy consumption. The hydrogen product, even after processing by the water-gas shift, still typically contains ∼1% CO, which must be removed for many applications. Methanation (CO + 3H2 → CH4 + H2O) is an effective solution to this problem, but consumes 5-15% of the generated hydrogen. The preferential oxidation (PROX) of CO with O2 in hydrogen represents a more-efficient solution. Supported gold nanoparticles, with their high CO-oxidation activity and notoriously low hydrogenation activity, have long been examined as PROX catalysts, but have shown disappointingly low activity and selectivity. Here we show that, under the proper conditions, a commercial Au/Al2O3 catalyst can remove CO to below 10 ppm and still maintain an O2-to-CO2 selectivity of 80-90%. The key to maximizing the catalyst activity and selectivity is to carefully control the feed-flow rate and maintain one to two monolayers of water (a key CO-oxidation co-catalyst) on the catalyst surface.


Nature Chemistry | 2017

Strong metal-support interactions: An extra layer of complexity

Bert D. Chandler

Strong interactions between oxide supports and catalytic metal particles can lead to inhibitive oxide layers forming over the active metal catalyst. Now, adsorbate-induced metal–support interactions have been shown to lead to a porous overlayer in the Rh/TiO2 system that tunes catalyst activity, improving its selectivity for the partial reduction of CO2.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

CO Oxidation Kinetics over Au/TiO2 and Au/Al2O3 Catalysts: Evidence for a Common Water-Assisted Mechanism

Johnny Saavedra; Christopher J. Pursell; Bert D. Chandler

The mechanism of CO oxidation over supported gold catalysts has long been debated, with two prevailing mechanisms dominating the discussion: a water-assisted mechanism and a mechanism involving O-defect sites. In this study, we directly address this debate through a kinetic and mechanistic investigation of the role of water in CO oxidation over Au/TiO2 and Au/Al2O3 catalysts; the results clearly indicate a common water-assisted mechanism to be at work. Water adsorption isotherms were determined with infrared spectroscopy; the extracted equilibrium constant was essentially the same for both catalysts. Added water decreases CO adsorption on Au/TiO2, likely by blocking CO binding sites at the metal-support interface. Reaction kinetics (CO, O2, and H2O reaction orders) were essentially the same for both catalysts, as were measured O-H(D) kinetic isotope effects. These data indicate that the two catalysts operate by essentially the same mechanism under the conditions of these experiments (ambient temperature, significant amounts of water available). A reaction mechanism incorporating the kinetic and thermodynamic data and accounting for different CO and O2/COOH binding sites is proposed. The mechanism and kinetic data are treated with an active site (Michaelis-Menten) approach. This indicated that water adsorption does not significantly affect reaction rate constants, only the number of active sites available at a given water pressure. Extracted water and O2 binding constants are similar on both catalysts and consistent with previous DFT calculations. Water adsorption constants are also similar to independently determined equilibrium constants measured by IR spectroscopy. The likely roles of water, surface carbonates, and oxygen vacancies at the metal-support interface are discussed. The results definitively show that, at least in the presence of added water, O vacancies cannot play an important role in the room-temperature catalysis, and that the water-assisted mechanism is far more consistent with the preponderance of the kinetic data.


Langmuir | 2009

Patterning High Surface Area Silica with Lysozyme: Adsorption Kinetics, Fluorescence Quenching, and Protein Readsorption Studies To Evaluate the Templated Surface

Rachel M. Greer; Brittni Scruggs; R. Alan May; Bert D. Chandler

A method was developed for using an inexpensive and widely available protein, hen egg white lysozyme, as a patterning agent for commercial high surface area silicas. The basic patterning methodology involved spontaneous adsorption of the protein from aqueous solution, alkylation of the uncovered surface with an alkylsiloxane, and protein desorption in a slightly alkaline solution of morpholine. Adsorption kinetic studies using Bradford assays assisted in determining protein deposition conditions. These studies were generally consistent with results on more planar silica surfaces and indicated that the protein quickly and strongly adsorbs along its long axis at low surface coverages. A modified fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) technique was developed and employed to evaluate protein spacing. This technique showed that the proteins are well dispersed at low coverages. Readsorption experiments show that the templated regions are robust, retaining the size and shape of the original protein templates.


Nature Chemistry | 2018

Evaluating differences in the active-site electronics of supported Au nanoparticle catalysts using Hammett and DFT studies

Gaurav Kumar; Luke Tibbitts; Jaclyn Newell; Basu Panthi; Ahana Mukhopadhyay; Robert M. Rioux; Christopher J. Pursell; Michael J. Janik; Bert D. Chandler

Supported metal catalysts, which are composed of metal nanoparticles dispersed on metal oxides or other high-surface-area materials, are ubiquitous in industrially catalysed reactions. Identifying and characterizing the catalytic active sites on these materials still remains a substantial challenge, even though it is required to guide rational design of practical heterogeneous catalysts. Metal-support interactions have an enormous impact on the chemistry of the catalytic active site and can determine the optimum support for a reaction; however, few direct probes of these interactions are available. Here we show how benzyl alcohol oxidation Hammett studies can be used to characterize differences in the catalytic activity of Au nanoparticles hosted on various metal-oxide supports. We combine reactivity analysis with density functional theory calculations to demonstrate that the slope of experimental Hammett plots is affected by electron donation from the underlying oxide support to the Au particles.


Archive | 2007

Dendrimer Templates for Supported Nanoparticle Catalysts

Huifang Lang; Bert D. Chandler

Catalysis has a tremendous impact on the national economy as one-third of material U.S. GNP involves a catalytic process somewhere in the production chain.1 Catalytic technologies are well established throughout the economy, particularly in petroleum refining, emissions and pollution control (including energy production), polymers and plastics, pharmaceuticals and fine chemicals, and basic chemicals.2 The utilization of heterogeneous catalysts in these areas of chemical industry is certain to increase as environmental and economic pressures drive the movement toward clean, selective chemical processes.2 Similarly, developing new catalysts for more efficient, cost-effective processes will be especially important for growing industries involved in the potential development of a hydrogen economy.3,4 An important class of industrial catalysts consists of an active component dispersed in the form of very small particles over high surface area solids.5 As the field of industrial heterogeneous catalysis has developed, catalyst formulations have evolved such that state-of-the-art catalysts often contain two or more metals and/or main group elements. The additives may promote a desired reaction, prevent undesirable side reactions, or enhance catalyst longevity.5−7 Bimetallic nanoparticle catalysts in particular are widely


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

H2 Oxidation over Supported Au Nanoparticle Catalysts: Evidence for Heterolytic H2 Activation at the Metal-Support Interface

Todd Whittaker; Sravan Kumar Kanchari Bavajigari; Christine Peterson; Meagan N. Pollock; Lars C. Grabow; Bert D. Chandler

Water adsorbed at the metal-support interface (MSI) plays an important role in multiple reactions. Due to its importance in CO preferential oxidation (PrOx), we examined H2 oxidation kinetics in the presence of water over Au/TiO2 and Au/Al2O3 catalysts, reaching the following mechanistic conclusions: (i) O2 activation follows a similar mechanism to that proposed in CO oxidation catalysis; (ii) weakly adsorbed H2O is a strong reaction inhibitor; (iii) fast H2 activation occurs at the MSI, and (iv) H2 activation kinetics are inconsistent with traditional dissociative H2 chemisorption on metals. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations using a supported Au nanorod model suggest H2 activation proceeds through a heterolytic dissociation mechanism, resulting in a formal hydride residing on the Au and a proton bound to a surface TiOH group. This potential mechanism was supported by infrared spectroscopy experiments during H2 adsorption on a deuterated Au/TiO2 surface, which showed rapid H-D scrambling with surface hydroxyl groups. DFT calculations suggest that the reaction proceeds largely through proton-mediated pathways and that typical Brønsted-Evans Polanyi behavior is broken by introducing weak acid/base sites at the MSI. The kinetics data were successfully reinterpreted in the context of the heterolytic H2 activation mechanism, tying together the experimental and computational evidence and rationalizing the observed inhibition by physiorbed water on the support as blocking the MSI sites required for heterolytic H2 activation. In addition to providing evidence for this unusual H2 activation mechanism, these results offer additional insight into why water dramatically improves CO PrOx catalysis over Au.

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John D. Gilbertson

Western Washington University

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Keith J. Stevenson

Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology

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Ganesh Vijayaraghavan

University of Texas at Austin

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Robert M. Rioux

Pennsylvania State University

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