2 research outputs found
The Role of Grain Boundary Sites for the Oxidation of Copper Catalysts during the CO Oxidation Reaction
The oxidation of transition metal surfaces is a process
that takes
place readily at ambient conditions and that, depending on the specific
catalytic reaction at hand, can either boost or hamper activity and
selectivity. Cu catalysts are no exception in this respect since they
exhibit different oxidation states for which contradicting activities
have been reported, as, for example, in the catalytic oxidation of
CO. Here, we investigate the impact of low-coordination sites on nanofabricated
Cu nanoparticles with engineered grain boundaries on the oxidation
of the Cu surface under CO oxidation reaction conditions. Combining
multiplexed in situ single particle plasmonic nanoimaging, ex situ transmission electron microscopy imaging, and density
functional theory calculations reveals a distinct dependence of particle
oxidation rate on grain boundary density. Additionally, we found that
the oxide predominantly nucleates at grain boundary-surface intersections,
which leads to nonuniform oxide growth that suppresses Kirkendall-void
formation. The oxide nucleation rate on Cu metal catalysts was revealed
to be an interplay of surface coordination and CO oxidation behavior,
with low coordination favoring Cu oxidation and high coordination
favoring CO oxidation. These findings explain the observed single
particle-specific onset of Cu oxidation as being the consequence of
the individual particle grain structure and provide an explanation
for widely distributed activity states of particles in catalyst bed
ensembles
Lipid-Based Passivation in Nanofluidics
Stretching DNA in nanochannels is a useful tool for direct,
visual
studies of genomic DNA at the single molecule level. To facilitate
the study of the interaction of linear DNA with proteins in nanochannels,
we have implemented a highly effective passivation scheme based on
lipid bilayers. We demonstrate virtually complete long-term passivation
of nanochannel surfaces to a range of relevant reagents, including
streptavidin-coated quantum dots, RecA proteins, and RecA–DNA
complexes. We show that the performance of the lipid bilayer is significantly
better than that of standard bovine serum albumin-based passivation.
Finally, we show how the passivated devices allow us to monitor single
DNA cleavage events during enzymatic degradation by DNase I. We expect
that our approach will open up for detailed, systematic studies of
a wide range of protein–DNA interactions with high spatial
and temporal resolution