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Dive into the research topics where Xiang-Kui Gu is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiang-Kui Gu.


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.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Stabilization of Copper Catalysts for Liquid‐Phase Reactions by Atomic Layer Deposition

David H. K. Jackson; Anthony J. Crisci; Carrie A. Farberow; Fengyuan Shi; Ana C. Alba-Rubio; Junling Lu; Paul J. Dietrich; Xiang-Kui Gu; Christopher L. Marshall; Peter C. Stair; Jeffrey W. Elam; Jeffrey T. Miller; Fabio H. Ribeiro; Paul M. Voyles; Jeffrey Greeley; Manos Mavrikakis; Susannah L. Scott; T. F. Kuech; James A. Dumesic

Atomic layer deposition (ALD) of an alumina overcoat can stabilize a base metal catalyst (e.g., copper) for liquid-phase catalytic reactions (e.g., hydrogenation of biomass-derived furfural in alcoholic solvents or water), thereby eliminating the deactivation of conventional catalysts by sintering and leaching. This method of catalyst stabilization alleviates the need to employ precious metals (e.g., platinum) in liquid-phase catalytic processing. The alumina overcoat initially covers the catalyst surface completely. By using solid state NMR spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and electron microscopy, it was shown that high temperature treatment opens porosity in the overcoat by forming crystallites of γ-Al2 O3 . Infrared spectroscopic measurements and scanning tunneling microscopy studies of trimethylaluminum ALD on copper show that the remarkable stability imparted to the nanoparticles arises from selective armoring of under-coordinated copper atoms on the nanoparticle surface.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Crystal‐Plane‐Controlled Selectivity of Cu2O Catalysts in Propylene Oxidation with Molecular Oxygen

Qing Hua; Tian Cao; Xiang-Kui Gu; Ji-Qing Lu; Zhiquan Jiang; Xiaorong Pan; Liangfeng Luo; Wei-Xue Li; Weixin Huang

The selective oxidation of propylene with O2 to propylene oxide and acrolein is of great interest and importance. We report the crystal-plane-controlled selectivity of uniform capping-ligand-free Cu2 O octahedra, cubes, and rhombic dodecahedra in catalyzing propylene oxidation with O2 : Cu2 O octahedra exposing {111} crystal planes are most selective for acrolein; Cu2 O cubes exposing {100} crystal planes are most selective for CO2 ; Cu2 O rhombic dodecahedra exposing {110} crystal planes are most selective for propylene oxide. One-coordinated Cu on Cu2 O(111), three-coordinated O on Cu2 O(110), and two-coordinated O on Cu2 O(100) were identified as the catalytically active sites for the production of acrolein, propylene oxide, and CO2 , respectively. These results reveal that crystal-plane engineering of oxide catalysts could be a useful strategy for developing selective catalysts and for gaining fundamental understanding of complex heterogeneous catalytic reactions at the molecular level.


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.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Trimethylaluminum and Oxygen Atomic Layer Deposition on Hydroxyl-Free Cu(111).

Amir Gharachorlou; Michael D. Detwiler; Xiang-Kui Gu; Lukas Mayr; Bernhard Klötzer; Jeffrey Greeley; R. Reifenberger; W. Nicholas Delgass; Fabio H. Ribeiro; Dmitry Zemlyanov

Atomic layer deposition (ALD) of alumina using trimethylaluminum (TMA) has technological importance in microelectronics. This process has demonstrated a high potential in applications of protective coatings on Cu surfaces for control of diffusion of Cu in Cu2S films in photovoltaic devices and sintering of Cu-based nanoparticles in liquid phase hydrogenation reactions. With this motivation in mind, the reaction between TMA and oxygen was investigated on Cu(111) and Cu2O/Cu(111) surfaces. TMA did not adsorb on the Cu(111) surface, a result consistent with density functional theory (DFT) calculations predicting that TMA adsorption and decomposition are thermodynamically unfavorable on pure Cu(111). On the other hand, TMA readily adsorbed on the Cu2O/Cu(111) surface at 473 K resulting in the reduction of some surface Cu1+ to metallic copper (Cu0) and the formation of a copper aluminate, most likely CuAlO2. The reaction is limited by the amount of surface oxygen. After the first TMA half-cycle on Cu2O/Cu(111), two-dimensional (2D) islands of the aluminate were observed on the surface by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). According to DFT calculations, TMA decomposed completely on Cu2O/Cu(111). High-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS) was used to distinguish between tetrahedrally (Altet) and octahedrally (Aloct) coordinated Al3+ in surface adlayers. TMA dosing produced an aluminum oxide film, which contained more octahedrally coordinated Al3+ (Altet/Aloct HREELS peak area ratio ≈ 0.3) than did dosing O2 (Altet/Aloct HREELS peak area ratio ≈ 0.5). After the first ALD cycle, TMA reacted with both Cu2O and aluminum oxide surfaces in the absence of hydroxyl groups until film closure by the fourth ALD cycle. Then, TMA continued to react with surface Al–O, forming stoichiometric Al2O3. O2 half-cycles at 623 K were more effective for carbon removal than O2 half-cycles at 473 K or water half-cycles at 623 K. The growth rate was approximately 3–4 Å/cycle for TMA+O2 ALD (O2 half-cycles at 623 K). No preferential growth of Al2O3 on the steps of Cu(111) was observed. According to STM, Al2O3 grows homogeneously on Cu(111) terraces.


Chinese Journal of Catalysis | 2013

First-principles study of water activation on Cu-ZnO catalysts

Kun Yao; Sha-Sha Wang; Xiang-Kui Gu; Hai-Yan Su; Wei-Xue Li

Abstract Although many water-related catalytic reactions on Cu-ZnO catalysts, such as methanol steam reforming and water gas shift, have been extensively investigated, little is known about water dissociation on Cu-ZnO catalysts. To reveal the active center for water dissociation on Cu-ZnO catalysts, we performed density functional theory calculations on various domains of Cu-ZnO catalysts, including Cu surfaces, supported ZnO films, and Cu-ZnO interfaces. It is found that water dissociation is hindered by a relatively large energy barrier on both the planar and the stepped Cu surfaces. On supported ZnO films, the barrier of water dissociation is significantly lowered compared with the Cu surfaces and the reaction is essentially thermo-neutral, thus the dissociation reaction will easily reach a state of dynamic equilibrium and dissociative and molecular water can coexist on the film. At the Cu-ZnO interface, water dissociation is exothermic and proceeds essentially without an energy barrier. The enhanced activity of the Cu-ZnO interface is due to the strong adsorption of both the H atom and hydroxyl group, and the step-like structure at the interface. The low energy barrier of hydroxyl diffusion and water-assisted hydrogen diffusion on ZnO films allows water dissociation to occur continuously at the interface. This work highlights the unique role of the Cu-ZnO interface in water dissociation on Cu-ZnO catalysts.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2010

First-Principles Study on the Origin of the Different Selectivities for Methanol Steam Reforming on Cu(111) and Pd(111)

Xiang-Kui Gu; Wei-Xue Li


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014

Single Pd Atom Embedded in CeO2(111) for NO Reduction with CO: A First-Principles Study

Wuchen Ding; Xiang-Kui Gu; Hai-Yan Su; Wei-Xue Li


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Theoretical Study of the Role of a Metal–Cation Ensemble at the Oxide–Metal Boundary on CO Oxidation

Dapeng Sun; Xiang-Kui Gu; Runhai Ouyang; Hai-Yan Su; Qiang Fu; Xinhe Bao; Wei-Xue Li


ACS Catalysis | 2017

Water-Mediated Mars–Van Krevelen Mechanism for CO Oxidation on Ceria-Supported Single-Atom Pt1 Catalyst

Chunlei Wang; Xiang-Kui Gu; Huan Yan; Yue Lin; Junjie Li; Dandan Liu; Wei-Xue Li; Junling Lu

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Wei-Xue Li

University of Science and Technology of China

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Hai-Yan Su

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Junling Lu

University of Science and Technology of China

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Xinhe Bao

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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