AVS 63rd International Symposium & Exhibition
    Surface Science Tuesday Sessions
       Session SS2+AS+HC+NS-TuM

Paper SS2+AS+HC+NS-TuM4
Adsorption and Adhesion Energies of Au, Cu, and Ag Nanoparticles on CeO2(111), MgO(100) and Other Oxide Surfaces

Tuesday, November 8, 2016, 9:00 am, Room 104E

Session: Nanostructures: Growth, Reactivity, and Catalysis
Presenter: Charles T. Campbell, University of Washington
Authors: C.T. Campbell, University of Washington
S.L. Hemmingson, University of Washington
G.M. Feeley, University of Washington
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Heterogeneous catalysts consisting of late transition metal nanoparticles dispersed across oxide supports are ubiquitous in industrial chemistry and energy technology. We have used an ultrahigh vacuum single-crystal adsorption calorimeter to study the adsorption energies of Au, Cu and Ag gas atoms as they adsorb and grow nanoparticles on single-crystal oxide surfaces as models for real catalyst systems. These measurements allow us to determine the chemical potential of metal atoms in supported nanoparticles as a function of particle size and the support upon which they sit. The support effect manifests itself very directly on metal chemical potential via the metal / oxide adhesion energy. Our earlier studies have shown that metal chemical potential can be related to the metal nanoparticle’s catalytic activity and deactivation rates through sintering, so there is a great motivation to understand how it varies with particle size and support, and how metal / oxide adhesion energies vary with the nature of the metal and the oxide support material. Through these measurements on a variety of systems, we have discovered systematic trends in these that allow predictions of adhesion energies for system which have not been measured. We have also measured the adsorption energy of isolated Cu atoms on CeO2(111) terrace sites, which is possible at 100 K. This is the first measurement of the adsorption energy of any late transition metal atom on any oxide surface of the type used as catalyst supports in a situation where the atom sits on the surface as an isolated monomer (as opposed to sitting within a small metal cluster).