Dynamic Metal-Support Interaction Dictates Cu Nanoparticle Sintering on AlO Surfaces.

Journal: ACS nano
Published Date:

Abstract

Nanoparticle sintering remains a critical challenge in heterogeneous catalysis. In this work, we present a unified deep potential (DP) model based on the Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof approximation of density functional theory for Cu nanoparticles on three AlO surfaces (γ-AlO(100), γ-AlO(110), and α-AlO(0001)). Using DP-accelerated simulations, we reveal that the nanoparticle size-mobility relationship strongly depends on the supporting surface. The diffusion of nanoparticles on the two γ-AlO surfaces is almost independent of the size of the nanoparticle, while the diffusion on α-AlO(0001) decreases rapidly with increasing size. Interestingly, nanoparticles with fewer than 55 atoms diffuse several times faster on α-AlO(0001) than on γ-AlO(100) at 800 K while expected to be more sluggish based on their larger binding energy at 0 K. The diffusion on α-AlO(0001) is facilitated by dynamic metal-support interaction (MSI), where Al atoms move out of the surface plane to optimize contact with the nanoparticle and relax back to the plane as the nanoparticle moves away. In contrast, the MSI on γ-AlO(100) and on γ-AlO(110) is dominated by more stable and directional Cu-O bonds, consistent with the limited diffusion observed on these surfaces. Our extended MD simulations provide insight into the sintering processes, showing that the dispersity of the nanoparticles strongly influences the coalescence driven by nanoparticle diffusion. We observed that the coalescence of Cu nanoparticles on α-AlO(0001) can occur in a short time (10 ns) at 800 K even with an initial internanoparticle distance increased to 3 nm, while the coalescence on the two γ-AlO surfaces are inhibited significantly by increasing the initial internanoparticle distance. These findings demonstrate that the dynamics of the supporting surface is crucial to understanding the sintering mechanism and offer guidance for designing sinter-resistant catalysts by engineering the support morphology.

Authors

  • Jiayan Xu
    Health Science Center, Ningbo University, ningbo, China.
  • Shreeja Das
    Shell India Markets Pvt., Ltd., Mahadeva Kodigehalli, Bengaluru 562149, Karnataka, India.
  • Amar Deep Pathak
    Shell India Markets Pvt., Ltd., Mahadeva Kodigehalli, Bengaluru 562149, Karnataka, India.
  • Abhirup Patra
    Shell International Exploration & Production Inc., 200 N Dairy Ashford Rd, Houston, Texas 77079, United States.
  • Sharan Shetty
    Shell India Markets Pvt., Ltd., Mahadeva Kodigehalli, Bengaluru 562149, Karnataka, India.
  • Detlef Hohl
    Shell Information Technology International Inc., 3333 Highway 6 South, Houston, Texas 77082, United States.
  • Roberto Car
    Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, United States.

Keywords

No keywords available for this article.