Seminars

PIER Photon Science Colloquium: Nanocatalysis: The Shape of Things to Come

by Beatriz Roldan Cuenya (Department of Physics, Ruhr-University Bochum)

Europe/Berlin
CFEL, Bldg. 99 (DESY Hamburg)

CFEL, Bldg. 99

DESY Hamburg

Description
In order to comprehend the properties affecting the catalytic performance of metal nanoparticles (NPs), their dynamic nature and response to the environment must be taken into consideration. The working state of a NP catalyst might not be the state in which the catalyst was prepared, but a structural and/or chemical isomer that adapted to the particular reaction conditions. This work provides examples of recent advances in the preparation and characterization of NP catalysts with well-defined sizes and shapes. It discusses how to resolve the shape of nm-sized Pt, Au, Pd, and PtNi catalysts via a combination of in situ microscopy (AFM, STM, TEM), operando spectroscopy (XAFS, GISAXS) and modeling, and how to follow its evolution under different gaseous or liquid chemical environments and in the course of a reaction. It will be highlighted that for structure-sensitive reactions, catalytic properties such as the reaction rates, onset reaction temperature, activity, selectivity and stability against sintering can be tuned through controlled synthesis.