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Reactivity screening of single atoms on modified graphene surface -- From formation and scaling relations to catalytic activity

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 Added by Igor Pasti
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Single atom catalysts (SACs) present the ultimate level of catalyst utilization, which puts them in the focus of current research. For this reason, their understanding is crucial for the development of new efficient catalytic systems. Using Density Functional Theory calculations, model SACs consisted of nine metals (Ni, Cu, Ru, Rh, Pd, Ag, Ir, Pt and Au) on four different supports (pristine graphene, N- and B-doped graphene and graphene with single vacancy) were analyzed. Among them, only graphene with a single vacancy enables the formation of SACs, which are stable in terms of aggregation and dissolution under harsh conditions of electrocatalysis. Reactivity of models SACs was probed using atomic (hydrogen and A = C, N, O and S) and molecular adsorbates (AHx, x = 1, 2, 3 or 4, depending on A), giving nearly 600 different systems included in this study. Scaling relations between adsorption energies of A and AHx on model SACs were confirmed. However, the scaling is broken for the case of CH3. There is also an evident scaling between adsorption energies of atomic and molecular adsorbates on metals SAs supported by pristine, N-doped and B-doped graphene, which originates from similar electronic structures of SAs on these supports. Using the obtained data, we have analyzed the hydrogen evolution on the model SACs. Only M@graphene vacancy systems (excluding Ag and Au) are stable under hydrogen evolution conditions in highly acidic solutions. Additional interfacial effects are discussed and the need for proper theoretical treatment when studying SACs interactions with molecular species.

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68 - A. S. Dobrota 2019
Catalysis has entered everyday life through a number of technological processes relying on different catalytic systems. The increasing demand for such systems requires rationalization of the use of their expensive components, like noble metal catalysts. As such, a catalyst with low noble metal concentration, in which each one of the noble atoms is active, would reach the lowest price possible. Nevertheless, there are no reactivity descriptors outlined for this type of low coordinated supported atoms. Using DFT calculations, we consider three diverse systems as models of single atom catalysts. We investigate monomers and bimetallic dimers of Ru, Rh, Pd, Ir and Pt on MgO(001), Cu adatom on thin Mo(001)-supported films (NaF, MgO and ScN) and single Pt adatoms on oxidized graphene surfaces. Reactivity of these metal atoms was probed by CO. In each case we see the interaction through the donation-backdonation mechanism. In some cases the CO adsorption energies can be linked to the position of the d-band center and the charge of the adatom. Higher positioned d-band center and less charged supported single atoms bind CO weaker. Also, in some cases metal atoms less strongly bonded to the substrate bind CO more strongly. The results suggest that the identification of common activity descriptor(s) for single metal atoms on foreign supports is a difficult task with no unique solution. However, it is also suggested that the stability of adatoms and strong anchoring to the support are prerequisites for the application of descriptor-based search for novel single atom catalysts.
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