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Dive into the research topics where George W. Graham is active.

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Featured researches published by George W. Graham.


Nature Chemistry | 2017

Adsorbate-mediated strong metal–support interactions in oxide-supported Rh catalysts

John C. Matsubu; Shuyi Zhang; Leo DeRita; Nebojsa Marinkovic; Jingguang G. Chen; George W. Graham; Xiaoqing Pan; Phillip Christopher

The optimization of supported metal catalysts predominantly focuses on engineering the metal site, for which physical insights based on extensive theoretical and experimental contributions have enabled the rational design of active sites. Although it is well known that supports can influence the catalytic properties of metals, insights into how metal-support interactions can be exploited to optimize metal active-site properties are lacking. Here we utilize in situ spectroscopy and microscopy to identify and characterize a support effect in oxide-supported heterogeneous Rh catalysts. This effect is characterized by strongly bound adsorbates (HCOx) on reducible oxide supports (TiO2 and Nb2O5) that induce oxygen-vacancy formation in the support and cause HCOx-functionalized encapsulation of Rh nanoparticles by the support. The encapsulation layer is permeable to reactants, stable under the reaction conditions and strongly influences the catalytic properties of Rh, which enables rational and dynamic tuning of CO2-reduction selectivity.


Catalysis Letters | 2004

Coarsening of Pt particles in a model NOx trap

George W. Graham; H.-W. Jen; W. Chun; H. P. Sun; X. Q. Pan; Robert W. McCabe

The effects of temperature and atmosphere on the coarsening of Pt particles in a model NOx trap (Pt/BaO/Al2O3) were examined by XRD, TEM, and CO chemisorption. The main finding, that the most significant particle growth occurs at elevated temperatures under oxidizing conditions, is relevant to NOx trap durability.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Self-Regeneration of Pd–LaFeO3 Catalysts: New Insight from Atomic-Resolution Electron Microscopy

Michael B. Katz; George W. Graham; Yingwen Duan; Hong Liu; Carolina Adamo; Darrell G. Schlom; Xiaoqing Pan

Aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy was used to study atomic-scale processes in Pd-LaFeO(3) catalysts. Clear evidence for diffusion of Pd into LaFeO(3) and out of LaFe(0.95)Pd(0.05)O(3-δ) under high-temperature oxidizing and reducing conditions, respectively, was found, but the extent to which these processes occurred was quite limited. These observations cast doubt that such phenomena play a significant role in a postulated mechanism of self-regeneration of this system as an automotive exhaust-gas catalyst.


Nature Communications | 2015

Dynamic structural evolution of supported palladium-ceria core-shell catalysts revealed by in situ electron microscopy

Shuyi Zhang; Chen Chen; Matteo Cargnello; Paolo Fornasiero; Raymond J. Gorte; George W. Graham; Xiaoqing Pan

The exceptional activity for methane combustion of modular palladium–ceria core–shell subunits on silicon-functionalized alumina that was recently reported has created renewed interest in the potential of core–shell structures as catalysts. Here we report on our use of advanced ex situ and in situ electron microscopy with atomic resolution to show that the modular palladium–ceria core–shell subunits undergo structural evolution over a wide temperature range. In situ observations performed in an atmospheric gas cell within this temperature range provide real-time evidence that the palladium and ceria nanoparticle constituents of the palladium–ceria core–shell participate in a dynamical process that leads to the formation of an unanticipated structure comprised of an intimate mixture of palladium, cerium, silicon and oxygen, with very high dispersion. This finding may open new perspectives about the origin of the activity of this catalyst.


Nano Letters | 2016

Dynamical Observation and Detailed Description of Catalysts under Strong Metal–Support Interaction

Shuyi Zhang; Philipp N. Plessow; Joshua J. Willis; Sheng Dai; Mingjie Xu; George W. Graham; Matteo Cargnello; Frank Abild-Pedersen; Xiaoqing Pan

Understanding the structures of catalysts under realistic conditions with atomic precision is crucial to design better materials for challenging transformations. Under reducing conditions, certain reducible supports migrate onto supported metallic particles and create strong metal-support states that drastically change the reactivity of the systems. The details of this process are still unclear and preclude its thorough exploitation. Here, we report an atomic description of a palladium/titania (Pd/TiO2) system by combining state-of-the-art in situ transmission electron microscopy and density functional theory (DFT) calculations with structurally defined materials, in which we visualize the formation of the overlayers at the atomic scale under atmospheric pressure and high temperature. We show that an amorphous reduced titania layer is formed at low temperatures, and that crystallization of the layer into either mono- or bilayer structures is dictated by the reaction environment and predicted by theory. Furthermore, it occurs in combination with a dramatic reshaping of the metallic surface facets.


Catalysis Letters | 1997

Encapsulation of Pd particles by ceria-zirconia mixed oxides

George W. Graham; H.-W. Jen; W. Chun; Robert W. McCabe

Redox aging above 1000°C of initially high-surface-area (of order 100 m2/g) cerium-rich ceria-zirconia mixed oxides containing a few wt% Pd results in the loss of most of the surface area and concomitant encapsulation of a substantial fraction of the Pd. The encapsulated Pd exists in the form of metallic particles on the order of 10 nm in diameter held under a large (as much as 3.6 GPa) compressive stress by the mixed oxide. This stress, evidently arising from changes in lattice parameter of the mixed oxide, induced by aging, produces a volume contraction of Pd, which appears as a shift of Pd-peak positions in XRD measurements. Subsequent reduction and reoxidation of the mixed oxide in turn relieves and restores the stress on the Pd particles, which remain metallic throughout, demonstrating that this portion of the Pd is effectively lost for catalytic purposes.


Catalysis Letters | 2004

Leaching of Ba2+ in NOx Traps

George W. Graham; H.-W. Jen; Joseph R. Theis; Robert W. McCabe

It has been found that crystalline BaCO3 replaces crystalline BaAl2O4 in prototypical NOx traps upon exposure to liquid water. This phenomenon can be understood in terms of acid–base chemistry, where Ba2+ is leached from the aluminate, precipitating as a carbonate, under the influence of weak carbonic acid naturally present due to the equilibrium between CO2 in the air and the water. Consequences of such a redistribution of Ba2+ in a NOx trap could include a decrease in surface area of the trapping material and a loss of contact between the trapping material and the catalytic components, such as Pt. Indeed, preliminary testing has shown that exposure of fully formulated NOx traps to liquid water results in the loss of approximately half of the initial trapping capacity.


Advanced Materials | 2014

Water-Free Titania-Bronze Thin Films With Superfast Lithium Ion Transport

Kui Zhang; Michael B. Katz; Baihai Li; Sung Joo Kim; Xianfeng Du; Xiaoguang Hao; Jacob R. Jokisaari; Shuyi Zhang; George W. Graham; Anton Van der Ven; Bart M. Bartlett; Xiaoqing Pan

Using pulsed laser deposition, TiO2 (-) B and its recently discovered variant Ca:TiO2 (-) B (CaTi5O11) are synthesized as highly crystalline thin films for the first time by a completely water-free process. Significant enhancement in the Li-ion battery performance is achieved by manipulating the crystal orientation of the films, used as anodes, with a demonstration of extraordinary structural stability under extreme conditions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Quantitative and Atomic-Scale View of CO-Induced Pt Nanoparticle Surface Reconstruction at Saturation Coverage via DFT Calculations Coupled with in Situ TEM and IR

Talin Avanesian; Sheng Dai; Matthew J. Kale; George W. Graham; Xiaoqing Pan; Phillip Christopher

Atomic-scale insights into how supported metal nanoparticles catalyze chemical reactions are critical for the optimization of chemical conversion processes. It is well-known that different geometric configurations of surface atoms on supported metal nanoparticles have different catalytic reactivity and that the adsorption of reactive species can cause reconstruction of metal surfaces. Thus, characterizing metallic surface structures under reaction conditions at atomic scale is critical for understanding reactivity. Elucidation of such insights on high surface area oxide supported metal nanoparticles has been limited by less than atomic resolution typically achieved by environmental transmission electron microscopy (TEM) when operated under realistic conditions and a lack of correlated experimental measurements providing quantitative information about the distribution of exposed surface atoms under relevant reaction conditions. We overcome these limitations by correlating density functional theory predictions of adsorbate-induced surface reconstruction visually with atom-resolved imaging by in situ TEM and quantitatively with sample-averaged measurements of surface atom configurations by in situ infrared spectroscopy all at identical saturation adsorbate coverage. This is demonstrated for platinum (Pt) nanoparticle surface reconstruction induced by CO adsorption at saturation coverage and elevated (>400 K) temperature, which is relevant for the CO oxidation reaction under cold-start conditions in the catalytic convertor. Through our correlated approach, it is observed that the truncated octahedron shape adopted by bare Pt nanoparticles undergoes a reversible, facet selective reconstruction due to saturation CO coverage, where {100} facets roughen into vicinal stepped high Miller index facets, while {111} facets remain intact.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Catalyst Architecture for Stable Single Atom Dispersion Enables Site-Specific Spectroscopic and Reactivity Measurements of CO Adsorbed to Pt Atoms, Oxidized Pt Clusters, and Metallic Pt Clusters on TiO2

Leo DeRita; Sheng Dai; Kimberly Lopez-Zepeda; Nicholas Pham; George W. Graham; Xiaoqing Pan; Phillip Christopher

Oxide-supported precious metal nanoparticles are widely used industrial catalysts. Due to expense and rarity, developing synthetic protocols that reduce precious metal nanoparticle size and stabilize dispersed species is essential. Supported atomically dispersed, single precious metal atoms represent the most efficient metal utilization geometry, although debate regarding the catalytic activity of supported single precious atom species has arisen from difficulty in synthesizing homogeneous and stable single atom dispersions, and a lack of site-specific characterization approaches. We propose a catalyst architecture and characterization approach to overcome these limitations, by depositing ∼1 precious metal atom per support particle and characterizing structures by correlating scanning transmission electron microscopy imaging and CO probe molecule infrared spectroscopy. This is demonstrated for Pt supported on anatase TiO2. In these structures, isolated Pt atoms, Ptiso, remain stable through various conditions, and spectroscopic evidence suggests Ptiso species exist in homogeneous local environments. Comparing Ptiso to ∼1 nm preoxidized (Ptox) and prereduced (Ptmetal) Pt clusters on TiO2, we identify unique spectroscopic signatures of CO bound to each site and find CO adsorption energy is ordered: Ptiso ≪ Ptmetal < Ptox. Ptiso species exhibited a 2-fold greater turnover frequency for CO oxidation than 1 nm Ptmetal clusters but share an identical reaction mechanism. We propose the active catalytic sites are cationic interfacial Pt atoms bonded to TiO2 and that Ptiso exhibits optimal reactivity because every atom is exposed for catalysis and forms an interfacial site with TiO2. This approach should be generally useful for studying the behavior of supported precious metal atoms.

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Xiaoqing Pan

University of California

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Shuyi Zhang

University of Michigan

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Sheng Dai

University of California

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Kui Zhang

University of Michigan

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X. Q. Pan

University of Michigan

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Baihai Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Raymond J. Gorte

University of Pennsylvania

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