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Geometrical Structure of the Gold–Iron(III) Oxide Interfacial Perimeter for CO Oxidation
Author(s) -
Wei Xuejiao,
Shao Bin,
Zhou Yan,
Li Yong,
Jin Chuanchuan,
Liu Jingyue,
Shen Wenjie
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
angewandte chemie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1521-3757
pISSN - 0044-8249
DOI - 10.1002/ange.201805975
Subject(s) - perimeter , atom (system on chip) , crystallography , chemistry , catalysis , octahedron , particle size , materials science , chemical physics , crystal structure , geometry , biochemistry , mathematics , computer science , embedded system
The geometrical structure of the Au‐Fe 2 O 3 interfacial perimeter, which is generally considered as the active sites for low‐temperature oxidation of CO, was examined. It was found that the activity of the Au/Fe 2 O 3 catalysts not only depends on the number of the gold atoms at the interfacial perimeter but also strongly depends on the geometrical structure of these gold atoms, which is determined by the size of the gold particle. Aberration‐corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy images unambiguously suggested that the gold particles, transformed from a two‐dimensional flat shape to a well‐faceted truncated octahedron when the size slightly enlarged from 2.2 to 3.5 nm. Such a size‐induced shape evolution altered the chemical bonding environments of the gold atoms at the interfacial perimeters and consequently their catalytic activity. For Au particles with a mean size of 2.2 nm, the interfacial perimeter gold atoms possessed a higher degree of unsaturated coordination environment while for Au particles with a mean size of 3.5 nm the perimeter gold atoms mainly followed the atomic arrangements of Au {111} and {100} facets. Kinetic study, with respect to the reaction rate and the turnover frequency on the interfacial perimeter gold atom, found that the low‐coordinated perimeter gold atoms were intrinsically more active for CO oxidation. 18 O isotopic titration and Infrared spectroscopy experiments verified that CO oxidation at room temperature occurred at the Au‐Fe 2 O 3 interfacial perimeter, involving the participation of the lattice oxygen of Fe 2 O 3 for activating O 2 and the gold atoms for CO adsorption and activation.