TY - JOUR
T1 - Control and Manipulation of Gold Nanocatalysis
T2 - Effects of Metal Oxide Support Thickness and Composition
AU - Harding, Chris
AU - Habibpour, Vahideh
AU - Kunz, Sebastian
AU - Farnbacher, Adrian Nam Su
AU - Heiz, Ueii
AU - Yoon, Bokwon
AU - Landman, Uzi
PY - 2009/1/21
Y1 - 2009/1/21
N2 - Control and tunability of the catalytic oxidation of CO by gold clusters deposited on MgO surfaces grown on molybdenum, Mo(100), to various thicknesses are explored through temperature-programmed reaction measurements on mass-selected 20-atom gold clusters and via first-principles density functional theory calculations. Au 20 was chosen because in the gas phase it is characterized as an extraordinarily stable tetrahedral-pyramidal structure. Dependencies of the catalytic activities and microscopic reaction mechanisms on the thickness and stoichiometry of the MgO films and on the dimensionalities and structures of the adsorbed gold clusters are demonstrated and elucidated. Langmuir-Hinshelwood mechanisms and reaction barriers corresponding to observed low- and high-temperature CO oxidation reactions are calculated and analyzed. These reactions involve adsorbed O 2 molecules that are activated to a superoxo- or peroxolike state through partial occupation of the antibonding orbitais. In some cases, we find activated, dissociative adsorption of O 2 molecules, adsorbing at the cluster peripheral interface with the MgO surface. The reactant CO molecules either adsorb on the MgO surface in the cluster proximity or bind directly to the gold cluster. Along with the oxidation reactions on stoichiometric ultrathin MgO films, we also study reactions catalyzed by Au 20 nanoclusters adsorbed on relatively thick defect-poor MgO films supported on Mo and on defect-rich thick MgO surfaces containing oxygen vacancy defects.
AB - Control and tunability of the catalytic oxidation of CO by gold clusters deposited on MgO surfaces grown on molybdenum, Mo(100), to various thicknesses are explored through temperature-programmed reaction measurements on mass-selected 20-atom gold clusters and via first-principles density functional theory calculations. Au 20 was chosen because in the gas phase it is characterized as an extraordinarily stable tetrahedral-pyramidal structure. Dependencies of the catalytic activities and microscopic reaction mechanisms on the thickness and stoichiometry of the MgO films and on the dimensionalities and structures of the adsorbed gold clusters are demonstrated and elucidated. Langmuir-Hinshelwood mechanisms and reaction barriers corresponding to observed low- and high-temperature CO oxidation reactions are calculated and analyzed. These reactions involve adsorbed O 2 molecules that are activated to a superoxo- or peroxolike state through partial occupation of the antibonding orbitais. In some cases, we find activated, dissociative adsorption of O 2 molecules, adsorbing at the cluster peripheral interface with the MgO surface. The reactant CO molecules either adsorb on the MgO surface in the cluster proximity or bind directly to the gold cluster. Along with the oxidation reactions on stoichiometric ultrathin MgO films, we also study reactions catalyzed by Au 20 nanoclusters adsorbed on relatively thick defect-poor MgO films supported on Mo and on defect-rich thick MgO surfaces containing oxygen vacancy defects.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=67749099627&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/ja804893b
DO - 10.1021/ja804893b
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:67749099627
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 131
SP - 538
EP - 548
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 2
ER -