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Intrinsic Relation between Catalytic Activity of CO Oxidation on Ru Nanoparticles and Ru Oxides Uncovered with Ambient Pressure XPS

Year: 2012

Journal: Nano Lett., 2012, 12 (11), 5761–5768, 20131009

Authors: Kamran Qadir, Sang Hoon Joo, Bongjin S. Mun, Derek R. Butcher, J. Russell Renzas, Funda Aksoy, Zhi Liu, Gabor A. Somorjai, Jeong Young Park

Organizations: Graduate School of EEWS (WCU), and NanoCentury KI, KAIST, Daejeon 305-701, South Korea; School of Nano-Bioscience and Chemical Engineering, KIER-UNIST Advanced Center for Energy, and Low Dimensional Carbon Materials Center, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), UNIST-gil 50, Ulsan 689-798, South Korea; Department of Applied Physics, Hanyang University ERICA, Ansan 426-791, South Korea; Ertl Center for Electrochemistry and Catalysis, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, Gwangju 500-712, South Korea; Department of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, United States; Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, United States

Recent progress in colloidal synthesis of nanoparticles with well-controlled size, shape, and composition, together with development of in situ surface science characterization tools, such as ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS), has generated new opportunities to unravel the surface structure of working catalysts. We report an APXPS study of Ru nanoparticles to investigate catalytically active species on Ru nanoparticles under oxidizing, reducing, and CO oxidation reaction conditions. The 2.8 and 6 nm Ru nanoparticle model catalysts were synthesized in the presence of poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) polymer capping agent and deposited onto a flat Si support as two-dimensional arrays using the Langmuir–Blodgett deposition technique. Mild oxidative and reductive characteristics indicate the formation of surface oxide on the Ru nanoparticles, the thickness of which is found to be dependent on nanoparticle size. The larger 6 nm Ru nanoparticles were oxidized to a smaller extent than the smaller Ru 2.8 nm nanoparticles within the temperature range of 50–200 °C under reaction conditions, which appears to be correlated with the higher catalytic activity of the bigger nanoparticles. We found that the smaller Ru nanoparticles form bulk RuO2 on their surfaces, causing the lower catalytic activity. As the size of the nanoparticle increases, the core–shell type RuO2 becomes stable. Such in situ observations of Ru nanoparticles are useful in identifying the active state of the catalysts during use and, hence, may allow for rational catalyst designs for practical applications.