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Dive into the research topics where Davide Deiana is active.

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Featured researches published by Davide Deiana.


Nature Chemistry | 2014

Mass-selected nanoparticles of PtxY as model catalysts for oxygen electroreduction

Patricia Hernandez-Fernandez; Federico Masini; David Norman McCarthy; Christian Ejersbo Strebel; Daniel Friebel; Davide Deiana; Paolo Malacrida; Anders Ulrik Fregerslev Nierhoff; Anders Bodin; Anna M. Wise; Jane Hvolbæk Nielsen; Thomas Willum Hansen; Anders Nilsson; Ifan E. L. Stephens; Ib Chorkendorff

Low-temperature fuel cells are limited by the oxygen reduction reaction, and their widespread implementation in automotive vehicles is hindered by the cost of platinum, currently the best-known catalyst for reducing oxygen in terms of both activity and stability. One solution is to decrease the amount of platinum required, for example by alloying, but without detrimentally affecting its properties. The alloy PtxY is known to be active and stable, but its synthesis in nanoparticulate form has proved challenging, which limits its further study. Herein we demonstrate the synthesis, characterization and catalyst testing of model PtxY nanoparticles prepared through the gas-aggregation technique. The catalysts reported here are highly active, with a mass activity of up to 3.05 A mgPt(-1) at 0.9 V versus a reversible hydrogen electrode. Using a variety of characterization techniques, we show that the enhanced activity of PtxY over elemental platinum results exclusively from a compressive strain exerted on the platinum surface atoms by the alloy core.


Nature Materials | 2014

Enabling direct H2O2 production through rational electrocatalyst design.

Samira Siahrostami; Mohammadreza Karamad; Davide Deiana; Paolo Malacrida; Björn Wickman; María Escudero-Escribano; Elisa Antares Paoli; Rasmus Frydendal; Thomas Willum Hansen; Ib Chorkendorff; Ifan E. L. Stephens; Jan Rossmeisl

Future generations require more efficient and localized processes for energy conversion and chemical synthesis. The continuous on-site production of hydrogen peroxide would provide an attractive alternative to the present state-of-the-art, which is based on the complex anthraquinone process. The electrochemical reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide is a particularly promising means of achieving this aim. However, it would require active, selective and stable materials to catalyse the reaction. Although progress has been made in this respect, further improvements through the development of new electrocatalysts are needed. Using density functional theory calculations, we identify Pt-Hg as a promising candidate. Electrochemical measurements on Pt-Hg nanoparticles show more than an order of magnitude improvement in mass activity, that is, A g(-1) precious metal, for H2O2 production, over the best performing catalysts in the literature.


Nano Letters | 2014

Trends in the electrochemical synthesis of H2O2: enhancing activity and selectivity by electrocatalytic site engineering.

Davide Deiana; Mohammadreza Karamad; Samira Siahrostami; Paolo Malacrida; Thomas Willum Hansen; Jan Rossmeisl; Ib Chorkendorff; Ifan E. L. Stephens

The direct electrochemical synthesis of hydrogen peroxide is a promising alternative to currently used batch synthesis methods. Its industrial viability is dependent on the effective catalysis of the reduction of oxygen at the cathode. Herein, we study the factors controlling activity and selectivity for H2O2 production on metal surfaces. Using this approach, we discover two new catalysts for the reaction, Ag-Hg and Pd-Hg, with unique electrocatalytic properties both of which exhibit performance that far exceeds the current state-of-the art.


Nano Letters | 2014

High sintering resistance of size-selected platinum cluster catalysts by suppressed Ostwald ripening.

Kristina Wettergren; Florian F. Schweinberger; Davide Deiana; Claron J. Ridge; Andrew S. Crampton; Marian D. Rötzer; Thomas Willum Hansen; Vladimir P. Zhdanov; Ueli Heiz; Christoph Langhammer

Employing rationally designed model systems with precise atom-by-atom particle size control, we demonstrate by means of combining noninvasive in situ indirect nanoplasmonic sensing and ex situ scanning transmission electron microscopy that monomodal size-selected platinum cluster catalysts on different supports exhibit remarkable intrinsic sintering resistance even under reaction conditions. The observed stability is related to suppression of Ostwald ripening by elimination of its main driving force via size-selection. This study thus constitutes a general blueprint for the rational design of sintering resistant catalyst systems and for efficient experimental strategies to determine sintering mechanisms. Moreover, this is the first systematic experimental investigation of sintering processes in nanoparticle systems with an initially perfectly monomodal size distribution under ambient conditions.


Catalysis Letters | 2014

Ceria Prepared by Flame Spray Pyrolysis as an Efficient Catalyst for Oxidation of Diesel Soot

Jakob Munkholt Christensen; Davide Deiana; Jan-Dierk Grunwaldt; Anker Degn Jensen

Ceria has been prepared by flame spray pyrolysis and tested for activity in catalytic soot oxidation. In tight contact with soot the oxidation activity (measured in terms of the temperature of maximal oxidation rate, Tmax) of the flame made ceria is among the highest reported for CeO2. This can to a significant degree be ascribed to the large surface area achieved with the flame spray pyrolysis method. The importance of the inherent soot reactivity for the catalytic oxidation was studied using various soot samples, and the reactivity of the soot was found to have a significant impact, as the Tmax-value for oxidation in tight contact with a catalyst scaled linearly with the Tmax-value in non-catalytic soot oxidation. The Tmax-value in non-catalytic soot oxidation was in turn observed to scale linearly with the H/C ratio of the carbonaceous materials.Graphical Abstract


Nano Letters | 2017

Suppressing Nucleation in Metal–Organic Chemical Vapor Deposition of MoS2 Monolayers by Alkali Metal Halides

HoKwon Kim; Dmitry Ovchinnikov; Davide Deiana; Dmitrii Unuchek; Andras Kis

Toward the large-area deposition of MoS2 layers, we employ metal-organic precursors of Mo and S for a facile and reproducible van der Waals epitaxy on c-plane sapphire. Exposing c-sapphire substrates to alkali metal halide salts such as KI or NaCl together with the Mo precursor prior to the start of the growth process results in increasing the lateral dimensions of single crystalline domains by more than 2 orders of magnitude. The MoS2 grown this way exhibits high crystallinity and optoelectronic quality comparable to single-crystal MoS2 produced by conventional chemical vapor deposition methods. The presence of alkali metal halides suppresses the nucleation and enhances enlargement of domains while resulting in chemically pure MoS2 after transfer. Field-effect measurements in polymer electrolyte-gated devices result in promising electron mobility values close to 100 cm2 V-1 s-1 at cryogenic temperatures.


Chemcatchem | 2015

Determination of Core–Shell Structures in Pd-Hg Nanoparticles by STEM-EDX†

Davide Deiana; Paolo Malacrida; Ifan E. L. Stephens; Ib Chorkendorff; Jakob Birkedal Wagner; Thomas Willum Hansen

The structural and elemental configuration of a high‐performing Pd‐Hg electrocatalyst for oxygen reduction to hydrogen peroxide has been studied by means of high‐resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy. Pd‐Hg nanoparticles are shown to have a crystalline core–shell structure, with a Pd core and a Pd‐Hg ordered alloy shell. The ordered shell is responsible for the high oxygen reduction selectivity to H2O2.


Nano Letters | 2017

Geometrical Effect in 2D Nanopores

Ke Liu; Martina Lihter; Aditya Sarathy; Sabina Caneva; Hu Qiu; Davide Deiana; Vasiliki Tileli; Duncan T. L. Alexander; Stephan Hofmann; Dumitru Dumcenco; Andras Kis; Jean Pierre Leburton; Aleksandra Radenovic

A long-standing problem in the application of solid-state nanopores is the lack of the precise control over the geometry of artificially formed pores compared to the well-defined geometry in their biological counterpart, that is, protein nanopores. To date, experimentally investigated solid-state nanopores have been shown to adopt an approximately circular shape. In this Letter, we investigate the geometrical effect of the nanopore shape on ionic blockage induced by DNA translocation using triangular h-BN nanopores and approximately circular molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) nanopores. We observe a striking geometry-dependent ion scattering effect, which is further corroborated by a modified ionic blockage model. The well-acknowledged ionic blockage model is derived from uniform ion permeability through the 2D nanopore plane and hemisphere like access region in the nanopore vicinity. On the basis of our experimental results, we propose a modified ionic blockage model, which is highly related to the ionic profile caused by geometrical variations. Our findings shed light on the rational design of 2D nanopores and should be applicable to arbitrary nanopore shapes.


Nanotechnology | 2017

Contraction, cation oxidation state and size effects in cerium oxide nanoparticles

Maria Chiara Spadaro; Sergio D’Addato; S. Valeri; Lucia Amidani; Federico Boscherini; Giovanni Bertoni; Davide Deiana; P. Luches

An accurate description of the structural and chemical modifications of cerium oxide nanoparticles (NPs) is mandatory for understanding their functionality in applications. In this work we investigate the relation between local atomic structure, oxidation state, defectivity and size in cerium oxide NPs with variable diameter below 10 nm, using x-ray absorption fine structure analysis in the near and extended energy range. The NPs are prepared by physical methods under controlled conditions and analyzed in morphology and crystalline quality by high resolution transmission electron microscopy. We resolve here an important question on the local structure of cerium oxide NPs: we demonstrate a progressive contraction in the Ce-O interatomic distance with decreasing NP diameter and we relate the observed effect to the reduced dimensionality. The contraction is not significantly modified by inducing a 4%-6% higher Ce3+ concentration through thermal annealing in high vacuum. The consequences of the observed average cation-anion distance contraction on the properties of the NPs are discussed.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2014

Morphology of Ruthenium Particles for Methanation under Reactive Conditions

Thomas Willum Hansen; Federico Masini; Davide Deiana; Jane Hvolbæk Nielsen; Ib Chorkendorff

The potential of hydrogen as a future energy carrier is only fully unleashed if fuel processors generating hydrogen of a suitable purity can be engineered. Selective methanation of CO can be used as a first step for cleaning up feed gas for e.g. proton exchange membrane (PEM) fuel cells [1] where CO poison the platinum electrodes and for removing oxygen containing compounds in hydrogen used in ammonia plants [2].

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Ib Chorkendorff

Technical University of Denmark

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Ifan E. L. Stephens

Technical University of Denmark

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Thomas Willum Hansen

Technical University of Denmark

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Federico Masini

Technical University of Denmark

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Paolo Malacrida

Technical University of Denmark

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Jakob Birkedal Wagner

Technical University of Denmark

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David Norman McCarthy

Technical University of Denmark

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