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Understanding methanol dissociative adsorption and oxidation on amorphous oxide films
Interactions between a transition metal (oxide) catalyst and a support can tailor the number and nature of active sites, for instance in the methanol oxidation reaction. We here use ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AP-XPS) to identify and compare the surface adsorbates that form on amorphous metal oxide films that maximize such interactions. Considering Al(1-x)MxOy (M = Fe or Mn) films at a range of methanol : oxygen gas ratios and temperatures, we find that the redox-active transition metal site (characterized by methoxy formation) dominates dissociative methanol adsorption, while basic oxygen sites (characterized by carbonate formation) play a lesser role. Product detection, however, indicates complete oxidation to carbon dioxide and water with partial oxidation products (dimethyl ether) comprising a minor species. Comparing the intensity of methoxy and hydroxyl features at a fixed XPS chemical shift suggests methanol deprotonation during adsorption in oxygen rich conditions for high transition metal content. However, increasing methanol partial pressure and lower metal site density may promote oxygen vacancy formation and the dehydroxylation pathway, supported by a nominal reduction in the oxidation state of iron sites. These findings illustrate that AP-XPS and mass spectrometry together are powerful tools in understanding metal-support interactions, quantifying and probing the nature of catalytic active sites, and considering the link between electronic structure of materials and their catalytic activity
Origin of the surface-orientation dependence of the reduction kinetics of ultrathin ceria
Performance of catalytic redox reactions depends crucially on the oxygen storage and release capability of the catalyst and with that the catalyst’s defect chemistry. Here, we show that the surface defect chemistry of cerium oxide, a prototypical reducible oxide, differs markedly between two surface terminations. The results are in good agreement with density functional theory calculations and provide important guiding factors for rational design of industrially relevant catalysts. The study is conducted by preparing (100) and (111) terminated nanoislands of cerium oxide next to each other on Cu(111). Leveraging the benefits of full-field imaging capability of photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM), we follow the structural and chemical properties of the nanoislands under reducing hydrogen atmosphere simultaneously and in situ. The results, summarized in Figure 1, directly reveal different overall reducibility that can be traced to equilibrium oxygen vacancy concentrations via a kinetic model. The density functional theory calculations provide further details regarding the equilibrium co-ordination of oxygen vacancies for both surface planes. Conjoining the two, the unique simultaneous nature of the PEEM-facilitated structure–activity relationship study allows us to separate the thermodynamics of reduction from the kinetics of oxygen exchange, revealing the fact that the difference in reducibility of the two surfaces of ceria is not determined by the kinetic rate constants of the reduction reaction, but rather by the equilibrium concentration of oxygen vacancies, an information that has not been provided by the isolated model system approach to date. Surprisingly, the reason for the different reducibilities is a purely geometric one: the creation of nearest neighbor oxygen vacancies.
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Direct observation of the band gap transition in atomically thin ReS
ReS is considered as a promising candidate for novel electronic and
sensor applications. The low crystal symmetry of the van der Waals compound
ReS leads to a highly anisotropic optical, vibrational, and transport
behavior. However, the details of the electronic band structure of this
fascinating material are still largely unexplored. We present a
momentum-resolved study of the electronic structure of monolayer, bilayer, and
bulk ReS using k-space photoemission microscopy in combination with
first-principles calculations. We demonstrate that the valence electrons in
bulk ReS are - contrary to assumptions in recent literature - significantly
delocalized across the van der Waals gap. Furthermore, we directly observe the
evolution of the valence band dispersion as a function of the number of layers,
revealing a significantly increased effective electron mass in single-layer
crystals. We also find that only bilayer ReS has a direct band gap. Our
results establish bilayer ReS as a advantageous building block for
two-dimensional devices and van der Waals heterostructures
Correlating Surface Crystal Orientation and Gas Kinetics in Perovskite Oxide Electrodes
Solid–gas interactions at electrode surfaces determine the efficiency of solid-oxide fuel cells and electrolyzers. Here, the correlation between surface–gas kinetics and the crystal orientation of perovskite electrodes is studied in the model system LaSrCoFeO. The gas-exchange kinetics are characterized by synthesizing epitaxial half-cell geometries where three single-variant surfaces are produced [i.e., LaSrCoFeO/LaSrGaMgO/SrRuO/SrTiO (001), (110), and (111)]. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and electrical conductivity relaxation measurements reveal a strong surface-orientation dependency of the gas-exchange kinetics, wherein (111)-oriented surfaces exhibit an activity >3-times higher as compared to (001)-oriented surfaces. Oxygen partial pressure ((Formula presented.))-dependent electrochemical impedance spectroscopy studies reveal that while the three surfaces have different gas-exchange kinetics, the reaction mechanisms and rate-limiting steps are the same (i.e., charge-transfer to the diatomic oxygen species). First-principles calculations suggest that the formation energy of vacancies and adsorption at the various surfaces is different and influenced by the surface polarity. Finally, synchrotron-based, ambient-pressure X-ray spectroscopies reveal distinct electronic changes and surface chemistry among the different surface orientations. Taken together, thin-film epitaxy provides an efficient approach to control and understand the electrode reactivity ultimately demonstrating that the (111)-surface exhibits a high density of active surface sites which leads to higher activity.R.G. and A.F. contributed equally to this work. R.G., A.F., A.L., T.C., E.E., and L.W.M. acknowledge the support of the National Science Foundation under Grant OISE-1545907. D.P. acknowledges funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 797123. G.V. acknowledges the support of the National Science Foundation under Grant DMR-1708615. V.T. and T.I. acknowledge financial support from a Grant-in-Aid for Specially Promoted Research No. 16H06293) from MEXT, Japan and through the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and the Solid Oxide Interfaces for Faster Ion Transport JSPS Core-to-Core Program (Advanced Research Networks). J.K. acknowledge the support by World Premier International Research Center Initiative (WPI), Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan (MEXT), Japan, Solid Oxide Interfaces for Faster Ion Transport (SOIFIT) JSPS/EPSRC (EP/P026478/1) Core-to-Core Program (Advanced Research Networks). This research used resources of the Advanced Light Source, which is a DOE Office of Science User Facility under contract no. DE-AC02-05CH11231
Electronic structure of negative charge transfer CaFeO3 across the metal-insulator transition
We investigated the metal-insulator transition for epitaxial thin films of
the perovskite CaFeO3, a material with a significant oxygen ligand hole
contribution to its electronic structure. We find that biaxial tensile and
compressive strain suppress the metal-insulator transition temperature. By
combining hard X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, soft X-ray absorption
spectroscopy, and density functional calculations, we resolve the
element-specific changes to the electronic structure across the metal-insulator
transition. We demonstrate that the Fe electron valence undergoes no observable
change between the metallic and insulating states, whereas the O electronic
configuration undergoes significant changes. This strongly supports the
bond-disproportionation model of the metal-insulator transition for CaFeO3 and
highlights the importance of ligand holes in its electronic structure. By
sensitively measuring the ligand hole density, however, we find that it
increases by ~5-10% in the insulating state, which we ascribe to a further
localization of electron charge on the Fe sites. These results provide detailed
insight into the metal-insulator transition of negative charge transfer
compounds and should prove instructive for understanding metal-insulator
transitions in other late transition metal compounds such as the nickelates.Comment: Minor typographic changes mad
Studium bimetalických systémů Pd-Au a Pd-Sn
Katedra fyziky povrchů a plazmatuDepartment of Surface and Plasma ScienceFaculty of Mathematics and PhysicsMatematicko-fyzikálnà fakult
ZmÄ›na základnĂho tĂłnu Ĺ™eÄŤi a transformace hlasu pomocĂ PSOLA
In the paper a voice transformation approach based on the application of the Pitch Synchronous OverLap and Add /PSOLA/ principle and resampling is proposed. This algorithm has lower computational demands than frequency domain methods
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