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Dive into the research topics where Uta Hejral is active.

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Featured researches published by Uta Hejral.


Science | 2014

High-Energy Surface X-ray Diffraction for Fast Surface Structure Determination

Johan Gustafson; Mikhail Shipilin; Chu Zhang; Andreas Stierle; Uta Hejral; Uta Ruett; Olof Gutowski; Per-Anders Carlsson; Magnus Skoglundh; Edvin Lundgren

High-energy x-rays incident at grazing angles allow for rapid collection of surface diffraction beams. [Also see Perspective by Nicklin] Understanding the interaction between surfaces and their surroundings is crucial in many materials-science fields, such as catalysis, corrosion, and thin-film electronics, but existing characterization methods have not been capable of fully determining the structure of surfaces during dynamic processes, such as catalytic reactions, in a reasonable time frame. We demonstrate an x-ray-diffraction–based characterization method that uses high-energy photons (85 kiloelectron volts) to provide unexpected gains in data acquisition speed by several orders of magnitude and enables structural determinations of surfaces on time scales suitable for in situ studies. We illustrate the potential of high-energy surface x-ray diffraction by determining the structure of a palladium surface in situ during catalytic carbon monoxide oxidation and follow dynamic restructuring of the surface with subsecond time resolution. Speeding Up Surface Diffraction Surface diffraction methods can determine the atomic structure of the topmost layer of a crystal and also subsurface structures. However, many surface diffraction methods either require ultrahigh vacuum conditions, which limits the reaction conditions that can be studied, or require long data acquisition times, which limits temporal resolution. Using high x-ray energies, Gustafson et al. (p. 758, published online 30 January; see the Perspective by Nicklin) were able to measure the intensities of surface-diffracted beams to follow the surface oxidation that accompanies the changes in a palladium surface during the catalytic oxidation of CO with O2.


Nature Communications | 2016

Tracking the shape-dependent sintering of platinum-rhodium model catalysts under operando conditions.

Uta Hejral; Patrick Müller; Olivier Balmes; Diego Pontoni; A. Stierle

Nanoparticle sintering during catalytic reactions is a major cause for catalyst deactivation. Understanding its atomic-scale processes and finding strategies to reduce it is of paramount scientific and economic interest. Here, we report on the composition-dependent three-dimensional restructuring of epitaxial platinum–rhodium alloy nanoparticles on alumina during carbon monoxide oxidation at 550 K and near-atmospheric pressures employing in situ high-energy grazing incidence x-ray diffraction, online mass spectrometry and a combinatorial sample design. For platinum-rich particles our results disclose a dramatic reaction-induced height increase, accompanied by a corresponding reduction of the total particle surface coverage. We find this restructuring to be progressively reduced for particles with increasing rhodium composition. We explain our observations by a carbon monoxide oxidation promoted non-classical Ostwald ripening process during which smaller particles are destabilized by the heat of reaction. Its driving force lies in the initial particle shape which features for platinum-rich particles a kinetically stabilized, low aspect ratio.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2017

Novel in Situ Techniques for Studies of Model Catalysts

Edvin Lundgren; Chu Zhang; Lindsay R. Merte; Mikhail Shipilin; Sara Blomberg; Uta Hejral; Jianfeng Zhou; Johan Zetterberg; Johan Gustafson

Motivated mainly by catalysis, gas-surface interaction between single crystal surfaces and molecules has been studied for decades. Most of these studies have been performed in well-controlled environments and have been instrumental for the present day understanding of catalysis, providing information on surface structures, adsorption sites, and adsorption and desorption energies relevant for catalysis. However, the approach has been criticized for being too far from a catalyst operating under industrial conditions at high temperatures and pressures. To this end, a significant amount of effort over the years has been used to develop methods to investigate catalysts at more realistic conditions under operating conditions. One result from this effort is a vivid and sometimes heated discussion concerning the active phase for the seemingly simple CO oxidation reaction over the Pt-group metals in the literature. In recent years, we have explored the possibilities to perform experiments at conditions closer to those of a technical catalyst, in particular at increased pressures and temperatures. In this contribution, results from catalytic CO oxidation over a Pd(100) single crystal surface using Near Ambient Pressure X-ray Photo emission Spectroscopy (NAPXPS), Planar Laser-Induced Fluorescence (PLIF), and High Energy Surface X-ray Diffraction (HESXRD) are presented, and the strengths and weaknesses of the experimental techniques are discussed. Armed with structural knowledge from ultrahigh vacuum experiments, the presence of adsorbed molecules and gas-phase induced surface structures can be identified and related to changes in the reactivity or to reaction induced gas-flow limitations. In particular, the application of PLIF to catalysis allows one to visualize how the catalyst itself changes the gas composition close to the model catalyst surface upon ignition, and relate this to the observed surface structures. The effect obscures a straightforward relation between the active phase and the activity, since in the case of CO oxidation, the gas-phase close to the model catalyst surface is shown to be significantly more oxidizing than far away from the catalyst. We show that surface structural knowledge from UHV experiments and the composition of the gas phase close to the catalyst surface are crucial to understand structure-function relationships at semirealistic conditions. In the particular case of Pd, we argue that the surface structure of the PdO(101) has a significant influence on the activity, due to the presence of Coordinatively Unsaturated Sites (CUS) Pd atoms, similar to undercoordinated Ru and Ir atoms found for RuO2(110) and IrO2(110), respectively.


Catalysis Science & Technology | 2018

Structure–function relationship during CO2 methanation over Rh/Al2O3 and Rh/SiO2 catalysts under atmospheric pressure conditions

Natalia Mihaela Martin; Felix Hemmingsson; Xueting Wang; Lindsay R. Merte; Uta Hejral; Johan Gustafson; Magnus Skoglundh; Debora Motta Meira; Ann-Christin Dippel; Olof Gutowski; Matthias Bauer; Per-Anders Carlsson

The effect of the support material and chemical state of Rh in Rh/A2O3 and Rh/SiO2 model catalysts during CO2 hydrogenation were studied by a combined array of in situ characterisation techniques including diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray absorption spectroscopy and high-energy X-ray diffraction at 250–350 °C and atmospheric pressure. CO2 methanation proceeds via intermediate formation of adsorbed CO species on metallic Rh, likely followed by their hydrogenation to methane. The linearly-bonded CO species is suggested to be a more active precursor in the hydrogenation compared to the bridge-bonded species, which seems to be related to particle size effects: for larger particles mainly the formation of inactive bridge-bonded CO species takes place. Further, analysis of the chemical state of Rh under the reaction conditions reveal a minor formation of RhOx from dissociation of CO2, which is a consequence of the increased activity observed over the Rh/Al2O3 catalyst.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2013

In Situ Oxidation Study of Pt Nanoparticles on MgO(001)

Uta Hejral; Alina Vlad; Philipp Nolte; A. Stierle


Surface Science | 2014

Quantitative surface structure determination using in situ high-energy SXRD: Surface oxide formation on Pd(100) during catalytic CO oxidation

Mikhail Shipilin; Uta Hejral; Edvin Lundgren; Lindsay R. Merte; Chu Zhang; Andreas Stierle; Uta Ruett; Olof Gutowski; Magnus Skoglundh; Per-Anders Carlsson; Johan Gustafson


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015

Transient Structures of PdO during CO Oxidation over Pd(100)

Mikhail Shipilin; Johan Gustafson; Chu Zhang; Lindsay R. Merte; A. Stierle; Uta Hejral; Uta Ruett; Olof Gutowski; Magnus Skoglundh; Per-Anders Carlsson; Edvin Lundgren


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

In situ oxidation study of Pd–Rh nanoparticles on MgAl2O4(001)

Patrick Müller; Uta Hejral; Uta Rütt; Andreas Stierle


Physical Review B | 2016

Atomic structure of Pt nanoclusters supported by graphene/Ir(111) and reversible transformation under CO exposure

Dirk Franz; Nils Blanc; Johann Coraux; G. Renaud; Sven Runte; Timm Gerber; Carsten Busse; Thomas Michely; Peter J. Feibelman; Uta Hejral; A. Stierle


Physical Review B | 2017

High-energy x-ray diffraction from surfaces and nanoparticles

Uta Hejral; P. Müller; Mikhail Shipilin; Johan Gustafson; Dirk Franz; R. Shayduk; U. Rütt; Chu Zhang; Lindsay R. Merte; Edvin Lundgren; Vedran Vonk; Andreas Stierle

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Per-Anders Carlsson

Chalmers University of Technology

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Magnus Skoglundh

Chalmers University of Technology

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