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Controlling the Ru Island Decoration on Ni Nanoparticles to Tune the Activity for 5-Hydroxylmethylfurfural (HMF) Oxidation

Chemistry of Materials

Poerwoprajitno, Agus R.; Huber, Dale L.; Oluigbo, Chidinma J.; Xie, Yuhan; Somerville, Samuel V.; Persson, Ingemar; Ramadhan, Zeno R.; Cheong, Soshan; Dai, Liming; Gooding, J.J.; Tilley, Richard D.

Controlling the island decoration on metal nanoparticle supports is a major opportunity for improving the catalytic activity and an attractive synthetic challenge. The structure of the decorating metal determines how it interacts with the metal support and how it effectively catalyzes the reactants and the intermediates. In this work, we demonstrate that a slow-growth method maximizes the formation of Ru islands on faceted, branched Ni nanoparticles, thereby controlling the number of Ru–Ni atomic interactions and improving the catalytic activity. The Ru islands on branched Ni nanoparticles with the highest loading of Ru (9%) exhibited the highest activity for the electro-oxidation of biomass-derived 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF). In conclusion, these results demonstrate the ability to synthetically control the second metal decoration to tune metal–support interactions, thereby enhancing the catalytic activity.

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Iridium Nanocrystals Enriched with Defects and Atomic Steps to Enhance Oxygen Evolution Reaction Performance

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Poerwoprajitno, Agus R.; Tilley, Richard D.; Cheong, Soshan; Ikram, Farhat; Persson, Ingemar; Ramadhan, Zeno R.; Gooding, J.J.

The presence of defects can significantly improve catalytic activity and stability, as they influence the binding of the reactants, intermediates, and products to the catalyst. Controlling defects in the structures of nanocrystal catalysts is synthetically challenging. In this study, we demonstrate the ability to control the growth of Ir nanocrystals, enabling the tuning of both structural and surface defects. The Ir nanocrystals have unique structures that range from single crystals of a few nanometers to twinned nanoparticles and multiply twinned crystallites with a high density of atomic steps. Further, this approach of defect engineering enables us to understand their roles in enhancing the performance of the OER and producing an Ir catalyst with both high activity and stability. Our results show the importance of the concept of using synthetic control of structural and surface defects in metal nanoparticles as a strategy to improve catalytic performance.

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