Northwestern University researchers have developed a new method for making highly desirable catalysts from metal nanoparticles that could lead to better fuel cells, among other applications. This is a false color scanning electron microscopy image of tetrahexahedral nanoparticles. Credit: Northwestern University
A Northwestern University research team has developed a new method for making highly desirable catalysts from metal nanoparticles that could lead to better fuel cells, among other applications. The researchers also discovered the method can take spent catalysts and recycle them into active catalysts.
Made mainly of precious metals, these coveted catalysts are shaped like gems. Each particle has 24 different faces that present atoms at the surface in ways that make them more catalytically active than those available commercially.
The methodology takes basic metal precursors, and, using heat and stabilizing trace elements, rapidly transforms their shape into structures that are highly active catalytically. Commercial products such as fuel cells — important sources of clean energy — rely on such catalysts.
The method is a general one; the study shows it works with five monometallic nanoparticles and a library of bimetallic nanoparticles, spanning seven different metals, including platinum, cobalt, and nickel.
Northwestern University researchers have developed a new method that can recycle spent catalysts into active catalysts. Each particle has 24 different faces that present atoms at the surface in ways that make them more catalytically active than those available commercially. Credit: Northwestern University
“Many of these precious metals are responsible for catalyzing some of the most important chemical transformations used in the chemical, oil, and fuel cell industries,” said Chad A. Mirkin, the George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, who led the research.
“We not only can prepare commercially desirable catalysts, but we can recycle used fuel cell catalysts into the most active forms. Catalysts slowly degrade over time and change, so the fact that we can reclaim and reactivate these catalysts made of expensive materials is extremely valuable,” Mirkin said.
The study, which includes both simulations and experiments, was published on September 13, 2019, in the journal Science.
The new catalysts are called high-index facet nanoparticle catalysts — an optimal form for accelerating chemical reactions. Mirkin’s team found their platinum catalysts were 20 times faster than the commercial low-index form for the formic acid electrooxidation reaction (based upon platinum content).
“Platinum in the high-index facet form is different and better than it is in other nanoparticle forms,” said Chris Wolverton, a co-author of the study and the Jerome B. Cohen Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering.
“It’s all about chemistry,” added Mirkin, who also is director of Northwestern’s International Institute for Nanotechnology.
Top row: Three representative scanning electron microscopy images of tetrahexahedra platinum particles recorded along the [100], [110] and [111] crystal directions. Bottom: A library of monometallic and bimetallic alloy tetrahexahedral nanoparticles. Credit: Northwestern University
Reference: “Shape regulation of high-index facet nanoparticles by dealloying” by Liliang Huang, Mohan Liu, Haixin Lin, Yaobin Xu, Jinsong Wu, Vinayak P. Dravid, Chris Wolverton and Chad A. Mirkin, 13 September 2019, Science.
DOI: 10.1126/science.aax5843
The Science paper is titled “High-index facet nanoparticle-shape regulation by dealloying.” The first author is Liliang Huang, a graduate student in Mirkin’s lab.
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"This is a FALSE color scanning electron microscopy image of tetrahexahedral nanoparticles."
It is almost certainly a pseudocolor image. False-color images are created by combining two or three images captured at different wavelengths, or by different kinds of sensors. In this case, someone just added arbitrary colors by 'Photoshopping' the single SEM image, for 'artistic' purposes. It serves no real scientific purpose.