4.8 Article

Identify the Activity Origin of Pt Single-Atom Catalyst via Atom-by-Atom Counting

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 37, Pages 15243-15249

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c06381

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [22072150]
  2. CAS Project for Young Scientists in Basic Research [YSBR-022]
  3. Innovative Research Funds of Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics [DICPI202013]
  4. DICP-PRI Joint Foundation [PRIKY18015]
  5. CAS Youth Innovation Promotion Association [2019190]

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Atom dispersion in metal supported catalysts is crucial for their catalytic performances. Traditional spectroscopy methods are unable to accurately distinguish different structures. By using a methodology called electron-microscopy-based atom recognition statistics (EMARS), catalyst dispersion can be redefined at atomic precision in real space.
Atom dispersion in metal supported catalysts is vital as it structurally accounts for their catalytic performances. Since practical catalysts normally present structural diversity, such as the coexistence of single atoms, clusters, and particles, traditional spectroscopy methods including chemisorption, titration, and X-ray absorption, however, provide only an averaged description about the atom dispersion but are not able to distinguish localized structural divergence. In this work, through developing a methodology of electron-microscopy-based atom recognition statistics (EMARS), catalyst dispersion has been redefined at atomic precision in real space via the statistically counting 18 000+ Pt atoms for a Pt/Al2O3 industrial reforming catalyst. The EMARS results combined with in situ microscopy evidence disclose that the activity for aromatics production quantitatively correlates with the density of Pt single-atoms, while Pt clusters contribute no direct activity but could kinetically transform into single-atoms when being heated under an oxidative atmosphere. Compared to EMARS, the traditional hydrogen-oxygen titration method is found to induce serious bias in the Pt dispersion in reference to actual activity. This distinctive capability of EMARS for metal dispersion quantification offers a possibility of directly identifying the catalysis roles of different metal species in a practical catalyst via atom-resolved statistics.

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