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Dive into the research topics where Chaofa Xu is active.

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Featured researches published by Chaofa Xu.


Nature Materials | 2016

Interfacial electronic effects control the reaction selectivity of platinum catalysts

Guangxu Chen; Chaofa Xu; Xiaoqing Huang; Jinyu Ye; Lin Gu; Gang Li; Zichao Tang; Binghui Wu; Huayan Yang; Zipeng Zhao; Zhi-You Zhou; Gang Fu; Nanfeng Zheng

Tuning the electronic structure of heterogeneous metal catalysts has emerged as an effective strategy to optimize their catalytic activities. By preparing ethylenediamine-coated ultrathin platinum nanowires as a model catalyst, here we demonstrate an interfacial electronic effect induced by simple organic modifications to control the selectivity of metal nanocatalysts during catalytic hydrogenation. This we apply to produce thermodynamically unfavourable but industrially important compounds, with ultrathin platinum nanowires exhibiting an unexpectedly high selectivity for the production of N-hydroxylanilines, through the partial hydrogenation of nitroaromatics. Mechanistic studies reveal that the electron donation from ethylenediamine makes the surface of platinum nanowires highly electron rich. During catalysis, such an interfacial electronic effect makes the catalytic surface favour the adsorption of electron-deficient reactants over electron-rich substrates (that is, N-hydroxylanilines), thus preventing full hydrogenation. More importantly, this interfacial electronic effect, achieved through simple organic modifications, may now be used for the optimization of commercial platinum catalysts.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

An Intermetallic Au24Ag20 Superatom Nanocluster Stabilized by Labile Ligands

Yu Wang; Hai-Feng Su; Chaofa Xu; Gang Li; Lars Gell; Shui-Chao Lin; Zichao Tang; Hannu Häkkinen; Nanfeng Zheng

An intermetallic nanocluster containing 44 metal atoms, Au24Ag20(2-SPy)4(PhC≡C)20Cl2, was successfully synthesized and structurally characterized by single-crystal analysis and density funtional theory computations. The 44 metal atoms in the cluster are arranged as a concentric three-shell Au12@Ag20@Au12 Keplerate structure having a high symmetry. For the first time, the co-presence of three different types of anionic ligands (i.e., phenylalkynyl, 2-pyridylthiolate, and chloride) was revealed on the surface of metal nanoclusters. Similar to thiolates, alkynyls bind linearly to surface Au atoms using their σ-bonds, leading to the formation of two types of surface staple units (PhC≡C-Au-L, L = PhC≡C(-) or 2-pyridylthiolate) on the cluster. The co-presence of three different surface ligands allows the site-specific surface and functional modification of the cluster. The lability of PhC≡C(-) ligands on the cluster was demonstrated, making it possible to keep the metal core intact while removing partial surface capping. Moreover, it was found that ligand exchange on the cluster occurs easily to offer various derivatives with the same metal core but different surface functionality and thus different solubility.


Nature Communications | 2016

Plasmonic twinned silver nanoparticles with molecular precision

Huayan Yang; Yu Wang; Xi Chen; Xiaojing Zhao; Lin Gu; Huaqi Huang; Juanzhu Yan; Chaofa Xu; Gang Li; Junchao Wu; Alison J. Edwards; Birger Dittrich; Zichao Tang; Dongdong Wang; Lauri Lehtovaara; Hannu Häkkinen; Nanfeng Zheng

Determining the structures of nanoparticles at atomic resolution is vital to understand their structure–property correlations. Large metal nanoparticles with core diameter beyond 2 nm have, to date, eluded characterization by single-crystal X-ray analysis. Here we report the chemical syntheses and structures of two giant thiolated Ag nanoparticles containing 136 and 374 Ag atoms (that is, up to 3 nm core diameter). As the largest thiolated metal nanoparticles crystallographically determined so far, these Ag nanoparticles enter the truly metallic regime with the emergence of surface plasmon resonance. As miniatures of fivefold twinned nanostructures, these structures demonstrate a subtle distortion within fivefold twinned nanostructures of face-centred cubic metals. The Ag nanoparticles reported in this work serve as excellent models to understand the detailed structure distortion within twinned metal nanostructures and also how silver nanoparticles can span from the molecular to the metallic regime.


Advanced Science | 2015

Single‐Crystalline Rhodium Nanosheets with Atomic Thickness

Li Zhao; Chaofa Xu; Hai-Feng Su; Jinghong Liang; Shui-Chao Lin; Lin Gu; Xingli Wang; Mei Chen; Nanfeng Zheng

CO confinement strategy for ultrathin Rh nanosheets: CO is introduced as a confining agent to regulate the anisotropic growth of unique 2D structure. The single‐crystalline Rh nanosheets have a thickness of three to five atomic layers and tunable edge length ranging from 500 to 1300 nm. By understanding the formation mechanism, surface‐clean Rh nanosheets are also prepared and display better catalytic performance that their surfactant‐capped nanosheets.


Science Advances | 2017

Ultrastable atomic copper nanosheets for selective electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide

Lei Dai; Qing Qin; Pei Wang; Xiaojing Zhao; Chengyi Hu; Pengxin Liu; Ruixuan Qin; Mei Chen; Daohui Ou; Chaofa Xu; Shiguang Mo; Binghui Wu; Gang Fu; Peng Zhang; Nanfeng Zheng

Air-stable atomically thick copper nanosheets are prepared and used for selective electrochemical reduction of CO2 into CO. The electrochemical conversion of CO2 and H2O into syngas using renewably generated electricity is an attractive approach to simultaneously achieve chemical fixation of CO2 and storage of renewable energy. Developing cost-effective catalysts for selective electroreduction of CO2 into CO is essential to the practical applications of the approach. We report a simple synthetic strategy for the preparation of ultrathin Cu/Ni(OH)2 nanosheets as an excellent cost-effective catalyst for the electrochemical conversion of CO2 and H2O into tunable syngas under low overpotentials. These hybrid nanosheets with Cu(0)-enriched surface behave like noble metal nanocatalysts in both air stability and catalysis. Uniquely, Cu(0) within the nanosheets is stable against air oxidation for months because of the presence of formate on their surface. With the presence of atomically thick ultrastable Cu nanosheets, the hybrid Cu/Ni(OH)2 nanosheets display both excellent activity and selectivity in the electroreduction of CO2 to CO. At a low overpotential of 0.39 V, the nanosheets provide a current density of 4.3 mA/cm2 with a CO faradaic efficiency of 92%. No decay in the current is observed for more than 22 hours. The catalysts developed in this work are promising for building low-cost CO2 electrolyzers to produce CO.


ACS central science | 2016

Electrochemical Partial Reforming of Ethanol into Ethyl Acetate Using Ultrathin Co3O4 Nanosheets as a Highly Selective Anode Catalyst

Lei Dai; Qing Qin; Xiaojing Zhao; Chaofa Xu; Chengyi Hu; Shiguang Mo; Yu Olivia Wang; Shui-Chao Lin; Zichao Tang; Nanfeng Zheng

Electrochemical partial reforming of organics provides an alternative strategy to produce valuable organic compounds while generating H2 under mild conditions. In this work, highly selective electrochemical reforming of ethanol into ethyl acetate is successfully achieved by using ultrathin Co3O4 nanosheets with exposed (111) facets as an anode catalyst. Those nanosheets were synthesized by a one-pot, templateless hydrothermal method with the use of ammonia. NH3 was demonstrated critical to the overall formation of ultrathin Co3O4 nanosheets. With abundant active sites on Co3O4 (111), the as-synthesized ultrathin Co3O4 nanosheets exhibited enhanced electrocatalytic activities toward water and ethanol oxidations in alkaline media. More importantly, over the Co3O4 nanosheets, the electrooxidation from ethanol to ethyl acetate was so selective that no other oxidation products were yielded. With such a high selectivity, an electrolyzer cell using Co3O4 nanosheets as the anode electrocatalyst and Ni–Mo nanopowders as the cathode electrocatalyst has been successfully built for ethanol reforming. The electrolyzer cell was readily driven by a 1.5 V battery to achieve the effective production of both H2 and ethyl acetate. After the bulk electrolysis, about 95% of ethanol was electrochemically reformed into ethyl acetate. This work opens up new opportunities in designing a material system for building unique devices to generate both hydrogen and high-value organics at room temperature by utilizing electric energy from renewable sources.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

From Racemic Metal Nanoparticles to Optically Pure Enantiomers in One Pot

Huayan Yang; Juanzhu Yan; Yu Wang; Guocheng Deng; Hai-Feng Su; Xiaojing Zhao; Chaofa Xu; Boon K. Teo; Nanfeng Zheng

A general strategy, using mixed ligands, is utilized to synthesize atomically precise, intrinsically chiral nanocluster [Ag78(DPPP)6(SR)42] (Ag78) where DPPP is the achiral 1,3-bis(diphenyphosphino)propane and SR = SPhCF3. Ag78 crystallizes as racemates in a centric space group. Using chiral diphosphines BDPP = 2,4-bis(diphenylphosphino)pentane, the enantiomeric pair [Ag78(R/S-BDPP)6(SR)42] can be prepared with 100% optical purity. The chiral diphosphines gives rise to, separately, two asymmetric surface coordination motifs composed of tetrahedral R3PAg(SR)3 moieties. The flexible nature of C-C-C angles between the two phosphorus atoms restricts the relative orientation of the tetrahedral R3PAg(SR)3 moieties, thereby resulting in the enantiomeric selection of the intrinsic chiral metal core. This proof-of-concept strategy raises the prospect of enantioselectively synthesizing optically pure, atomically precise chiral noble metal nanoclusters for specific applications.


Chinese Journal of Catalysis | 2015

一种结合均相和非均相催化剂优势的聚乙炔纳米颗粒负载的钯(II)催化剂

Huan Li; Guangxu Chen; Paul N. Duchesne; Peng Zhang; Yan Dai; Huayan Yang; Binghui Wu; Shengjie Liu; Chaofa Xu; Nanfeng Zheng

A novel nanoparticulate polyacetylene-supported Pd(II) catalyst (NP-Pd(II)) for use in the aqueous Suzuki-Miyaura cross coupling reaction was successfully synthesized by simply treating an aqueous solution of PdCl42– with acetylene under ambient conditions. Electron microscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and X-ray absorption spectroscopy were employed to characterize the NP-Pd(II) structure in detail. These analyses demonstrated that the Pd atoms in the NP-Pd(II) were present as Pd(II) and were coordinated with both the Cl atoms and the C=C bonds of the polyacetylene. Both the homogeneous distribution of the Pd(II) along the polyacetylene backbone and the aggregation of the NP-Pd(II) in solution work in conjunction to make this material an ideal catalyst, combining the advantages of both homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts.


Nature Communications | 2018

Interfacing with silica boosts the catalysis of copper

Chaofa Xu; Guangxu Chen; Yun Zhao; Pengxin Liu; Xinping Duan; Lin Gu; Gang Fu; Youzhu Yuan; Nanfeng Zheng

Metal-support interaction is one of the most important parameters in controlling the catalysis of supported metal catalysts. Silica, a widely used oxide support, has been rarely reported as an effective support to create active metal-support interfaces for promoting catalysis. In this work, by coating Cu microparticles with mesoporous SiO2, we discover that Cu/SiO2 interface creates an exceptional effect to promote catalytic hydrogenation of esters. Both computational and experimental studies reveal that Cu–Hδ− and SiO–Hδ+ species would be formed at the Cu–O–SiOx interface upon H2 dissociation, thus promoting the ester hydrogenation by stablizing the transition states. Based on the proposed catalytic mechanism, encapsulting copper phyllosilicate nanotubes with mesoporous silica followed by hydrogen reduction is developed as an effective method to create a practical Cu nanocatalyst with abundant Cu-O-SiOx interfaces. The catalyst exhibits the best performance in the hydrogenation of dimethyl oxalate to ethylene glycol among all reported Cu catalysts.Metal-support interaction plays an important role in heterogeneous catalysis, but silica has been rarely reported as an effective support to create active metal-support interfaces for promoting catalytic reactions. Here, the authors discover that Cu/SiO2 interface creates an exceptional effect to promote catalytic hydrogenation of esters.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Embryonic Growth of Face-Center-Cubic Silver Nanoclusters Shaped in Nearly Perfect Half-Cubes and Cubes

Huayan Yang; Juanzhu Yan; Yu Wang; Hai-Feng Su; Lars Gell; Xiaojing Zhao; Chaofa Xu; Boon K. Teo; Hannu Häkkinen; Nanfeng Zheng

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Lin Gu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zichao Tang

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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