Browsing by Author "Qian, Huifeng"
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Item Hydrogen-generating behavior of Pd-decorated gold nanoparticles via formic acid decomposition(Elsevier, 2019) Zhao, Zhun; Heck, Kimberly N.; Limpornpipat, Pongsak; Qian, Huifeng; Miller, Jeffrey T.; Wong, Michael S.Formic acid is a promising hydrogen storage material where hydrogen is generated via metal-catalyzed decomposition. Bimetallic catalysts are active for this reaction, but the mechanism has not been fully proven. Palladium metal supported on gold nanoparticles (Pd-on-Au NPs) has structural properties that are advantageous for studying aqueous-phase catalytic reactions. In this work, a series of Pd-on-Au NPs of varying Pd loadings (calculated in terms of Pd surface coverage, sc%) were synthesized, immobilized onto carbon, and studied for formic acid decomposition at room temperature. Pd-on-Au NPs were catalytically active, with a reaction rate constant as high as 137 m L-H2/gPd/min (corresponding to an initial turnover frequency TOF of 123 h−1) at a Pd loading of 300 sc%. In contrast, Au NPs were inactive, and Pd NPs were slightly active (5 mL-H2/gPd/min and TOF of 38 h−1). The Pd metal of Pd-on-Au catalysts are partially oxidized, and is readily reduced without changing the metal-on-metal structure during reaction, according to in situ x-ray adsorption spectroscopy measurements. CO formation was inhibited at a Pd loading of 300 sc%, suggesting that three-dimensional Pd ensembles favored the desired dehydrogenation pathway while single-atom and small two-dimensional Pd ensembles are active for the undesired dehydration pathway.Item Two distinctive energy migration pathways of monolayer molecules on metal nanoparticle surfaces(Springer Nature, 2016) Li, Jiebo; Qian, Huifeng; Chen, Hailong; Zhao, Zhun; Yuan, Kaijun; Chen, Guangxu; Miranda, Andrea; Guo, Xunmin; Chen, Yajing; Zheng, Nanfeng; Wong, Michael S.; Zheng, JunrongEnergy migrations at metal nanomaterial surfaces are fundamentally important to heterogeneous reactions. Here we report two distinctive energy migration pathways of monolayer adsorbate molecules on differently sized metal nanoparticle surfaces investigated with ultrafast vibrational spectroscopy. On a 5 nm platinum particle, within a few picoseconds the vibrational energy of a carbon monoxide adsorbate rapidly dissipates into the particle through electron/hole pair excitations, generating heat that quickly migrates on surface. In contrast, the lack of vibration-electron coupling on approximately 1 nm particles results in vibrational energy migration among adsorbates that occurs on a twenty times slower timescale. Further investigations reveal that the rapid carbon monoxide energy relaxation is also affected by the adsorption sites and the nature of the metal but to a lesser extent. These findings reflect the dependence of electron/vibration coupling on the metallic nature, size and surface site of nanoparticles and its significance in mediating energy relaxations and migrations on nanoparticle surfaces.