Atomically Dispersed Platinum on Gold Nano-Octahedra
with High Catalytic Activity on Formic Acid Oxidation
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Abstract
Platinum
was epitaxially deposited on gold octahedral nanocrystals
using an electrochemical method. The coverage of platinum on the gold
surface was finely controlled from fully covered multiple overlayers
(5 monolayers; denoted as ML) to atomically dispersed submonolayer
(0.05 ML). Catalytic activity for formic acid oxidation increased
significantly (0.52 A/mg<sub>Pt</sub> for 5 ML to 62.6 A/mg<sub>Pt</sub> for 0.05 ML) with decreasing coverage. This high activity resulted
from the control of the reaction pathway toward direct oxidation producing
no surface-poisoning species, induced by the absence of platinum ensembles
and the bifunctional effect from neighboring Pt–Au sites. The
distribution of atomically dispersed platinum was further confirmed
by no activity for methanol oxidation, which necessitates platinum
ensembles. This result exemplifies that a rational design of the catalyst
nanostructure can lead to contrasting activities with the same catalyst,
unprecedentedly high activity for formic acid oxidation vs no activity
for methanol oxidation