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Dive into the research topics where Hai-Yan Su is active.

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Featured researches published by Hai-Yan Su.


Chemcatchem | 2011

Universality in Oxygen Evolution Electrocatalysis on Oxide Surfaces

Isabela C. Man; Hai-Yan Su; Federico Calle-Vallejo; Heine A. Hansen; José I. Martínez; Nilay İnoğlu; John R. Kitchin; Thomas F. Jaramillo; Jens K. Nørskov; Jan Rossmeisl

Trends in electrocatalytic activity of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) are investigated on the basis of a large database of HO* and HOO* adsorption energies on oxide surfaces. The theoretical overpotential was calculated by applying standard density functional theory in combination with the computational standard hydrogen electrode (SHE) model. We showed that by the discovery of a universal scaling relation between the adsorption energies of HOO* vs HO*, it is possible to analyze the reaction free energy diagrams of all the oxides in a general way. This gave rise to an activity volcano that was the same for a wide variety of oxide catalyst materials and a universal descriptor for the oxygen evolution activity, which suggests a fundamental limitation on the maximum oxygen evolution activity of planar oxide catalysts.


Science | 2010

Interface-Confined Ferrous Centers for Catalytic Oxidation

Qiang Fu; Wei-Xue Li; Yunxi Yao; Hongyang Liu; Hai-Yan Su; Ding Ma; Xiang-Kui Gu; Limin Chen; Zhen Wang; Hui Zhang; Bing Wang; Xinhe Bao

Catalysis at the Edge Many catalysts in solution, such as metalloenzymes and homogeneous metal complexes, create active sites where the metal ion is available to bind and activate reactants. Such coordinately unsaturated ferrous sites, or CUFs, have been created in a supported heterogeneous catalyst by Fu et al. (p. 1141). Ferrous oxide islands grown on platinum single-crystal surfaces were much more reactive for CO oxidation at low temperatures than more oxidized ferric islands. This difference arose from sites at the interface between the islands and the Pt surface that activated oxygen. Silica-supported Pt-Fe catalysts were active for CO removal from hydrogen streams, a reaction critical for maintaining the activity of fuel cells. The interface between ferrous oxide islands and a platinum support contains sites that activate dioxygen for catalytic reactions. Coordinatively unsaturated ferrous (CUF) sites confined in nanosized matrices are active centers in a wide range of enzyme and homogeneous catalytic reactions. Preparation of the analogous active sites at supported catalysts is of great importance in heterogeneous catalysis but remains a challenge. On the basis of surface science measurements and density functional calculations, we show that the interface confinement effect can be used to stabilize the CUF sites by taking advantage of strong adhesion between ferrous oxides and metal substrates. The interface-confined CUF sites together with the metal supports are active for dioxygen activation, producing reactive dissociated oxygen atoms. We show that the structural ensemble was highly efficient for carbon monoxide oxidation at low temperature under typical operating conditions of a proton-exchange membrane fuel cell.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Crystallographic Dependence of CO Activation on Cobalt Catalysts: HCP versus FCC

Jin-Xun Liu; Hai-Yan Su; Dapeng Sun; Bing-Yan Zhang; Wei-Xue Li

Identifying the structure sensitivity of catalysts in reactions, such as Fischer-Tropsch synthesis from CO and H2 over cobalt catalysts, is an important yet challenging issue in heterogeneous catalysis. Based on a first-principles kinetic study, we find for the first time that CO activation on hexagonal close-packed (HCP) Co not only has much higher intrinsic activity than that of face centered-cubic (FCC) Co but also prefers a different reaction route, i.e., direct dissociation with HCP Co but H-assisted dissociation on the FCC Co. The origin is identified from the formation of various denser yet favorable active sites on HCP Co not available for FCC Co, due to their distinct crystallographic structure and morphology. The great dependence of the activity on the crystallographic structure and morphology of the catalysts revealed here may open a new avenue for better, stable catalysts with maximum mass-specific reactivity.


Chemcatchem | 2011

Tailoring the Activity for Oxygen Evolution Electrocatalysis on Rutile TiO2(110) by Transition‐Metal Substitution

Mónica García-Mota; Aleksandra Vojvodic; Horia Metiu; Isabela C. Man; Hai-Yan Su; Jan Rossmeisl; Jens K. Nørskov

The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) on the rutile MTiO2(110) (M=V, Nb, Ta, Cr, Mo, W, Mn, Fe, Ru, Ir, Ni) surfaces was investigated by using density functional theory calculations. The stability of different doped TiO2 systems was analyzed. The scaling relationship between the binding energies of OER intermediates (HOO* versus HO*) is found to follow essentially the same trend as for undoped oxides. Our theoretical analysis shows a lower overpotential associated with OER on the doped MTiO2(110) than on the undoped TiO2(110). The theoretical activity of Cr‐, Mo‐, Mn‐, and Ir‐doped TiO2 is found to be close to that of RuO2(110) for some of the configurations in consideration.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Platinum-Modulated Cobalt Nanocatalysts for Low-Temperature Aqueous-Phase Fischer−Tropsch Synthesis

Hang Wang; Wu Zhou; Jin-Xun Liu; Rui Si; Geng Sun; Mengqi Zhong; Hai-Yan Su; Huabo Zhao; José A. Rodriguez; Stephen J. Pennycook; Juan-Carlos Idrobo; Wei-Xue Li; Yuan Kou; Ding Ma

Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS) is an important catalytic process for liquid fuel generation, which converts coal/shale gas/biomass-derived syngas (a mixture of CO and H2) to oil. While FTS is thermodynamically favored at low temperature, it is desirable to develop a new catalytic system that could allow working at a relatively low reaction temperature. In this article, we present a one-step hydrogenation-reduction route for the synthesis of Pt-Co nanoparticles (NPs) which were found to be excellent catalysts for aqueous-phase FTS at 433 K. Coupling with atomic-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and theoretical calculations, the outstanding activity is rationalized by the formation of Co overlayer structures on Pt NPs or Pt-Co alloy NPs. The improved energetics and kinetics from the change of the transition states imposed by the lattice mismatch between the two metals are concluded to be the key factors responsible for the dramatically improved FTS performance.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

Carbon Chain Growth by Formyl Insertion on Rhodium and Cobalt Catalysts in Syngas Conversion

Yonghui Zhao; Keju Sun; Xiufang Ma; Jin-Xun Liu; Dapeng Sun; Hai-Yan Su; Wei-Xue Li

Carbon Chain Growth by Formyl Insertion on Rhodium and Cobalt Catalysts in Syngas Conversion


ChemPhysChem | 2009

Reversible Structural Modulation of Fe–Pt Bimetallic Surfaces and Its Effect on Reactivity

Teng Ma; Qiang Fu; Hai-Yan Su; Hongyang Liu; Yi Cui; Zhen Wang; Rentao Mu; Wei-Xue Li; Xinhe Bao

Tunable surface: The surface structure of the Fe-Pt bimetallic catalyst can be reversibly modulated between the iron-oxide-rich Pt surface and the Pt-skin structure with subsurface Fe via alternating reduction and oxidation treatments (see figure). The regenerated active Pt-skin structure is active in reactions involving CO and/or O.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Modulating the reactivity of Ni-containing Pt(111)-skin catalysts by density functional theory calculations

Hai-Yan Su; Xinhe Bao; Wei-Xue Li

We present here a first principles density functional theory investigation of the reactivity of Pt(111)-skin catalysts, which are varied from surface alloys with Ni to bulk PtxNi 1-x (x=0.25,0.50,0.75) alloys. Molecule (CO, O, and H) adsorption and oxidation of CO+O and H+O reactions were studied and analyzed in detail. Independent of the adsorbates, the interaction between adsorbates and substrates becomes weakened with increase in Ni, due to the downshift of d-band center of surface Pt atoms. Moreover, activation barriers of CO and H oxidation toward atomic oxygen gradually decrease. In term of CO preferential oxidation (PROX) in excess of hydrogen, it turns out that the overall reactivity and selectivity rely on the optimum of various elementary steps involved such as competitive molecular (dissociative) adsorption and oxidation reaction. The present calculations show that Pt3Ni(111) with Pt overlayer is an optimum catalyst for CO PROX in excess of hydrogen.


Chemsuschem | 2012

CO oxidation at the perimeters of an FeO/Pt(111) interface and how water promotes the activity: a first-principles study.

Xiang-Kui Gu; Runhai Ouyang; Dapeng Sun; Hai-Yan Su; Wei-Xue Li

The catalytic role of the Pt--Fe cation ensemble presented at the perimeters of the FeO film supported on Pt(111) for low-temperature CO oxidation and the promotion of water on activity were studied by using DFT calculations. We found that the perimeter sites along the edge of the FeO islands on Pt provided a favorable ensemble that consisted of coordinatively unsaturated ferrous species and nearby Pt atoms for O(2) and H(2) O activation free from CO poison. A dissociative oxygen atom at the Pt--Fe cation ensemble reacts easily with CO adsorbed on nearby Pt. The OH group from water dissociation not only facilitates activation of the oxygen molecule, more importantly it opens a facile reaction channel for CO oxidation through the formation of the carboxyl intermediate. The presence of the OH group on the FeO film strengthens interfacial interactions between FeO and Pt(111), which would make the FeO film more resistant to further oxidation. The importance of the Pt--Fe cation ensemble and the role of water as a cocatalyst for low-temperature CO oxidation is highlighted.


Theoretical Chemistry Accounts | 2012

Force reversed method for locating transition states

Keju Sun; Yonghui Zhao; Hai-Yan Su; Wei-Xue Li

To identify the transition state accurately and efficiently on a high-dimensional potential energy surface is one of the most important topics in kinetic studies on chemical reactions. We present here an algorithm to search the transition state by so-called force reversed method, which only requires a rough reaction direction instead of knowing the initial state and final state. Compared to the nudged elastic band method and the dimer method that require multiple images, the present algorithm with only single image required saves significantly the computational cost. The algorithm was implemented in the first-principle periodic total energy calculation package and applied successfully to several prototype surface processes such as the adsorbate diffusion and dissociation on metal surfaces. The results indicate that the force reversed method is efficient, robust to identify the transition state of various surface processes.

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Wei-Xue Li

University of Science and Technology of China

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Keju Sun

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Xinhe Bao

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Yonghui Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jin-Xun Liu

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Jin-Xun Liu

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Dapeng Sun

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Isabela C. Man

Technical University of Denmark

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Jan Rossmeisl

University of Copenhagen

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