Ultrasmall Silver Clusters Stabilized on MgO for Robust Oxygen-Promoted Hydrogen Production from Formaldehyde Reforming.
Clicks: 235
ID: 57601
2019
Efficient molecular hydrogen generation from renewable biomass-derived resources and water is of great importance to the sustainable development of the future society. Herein, ultrasmall Ag nanoclusters supported on a defect-rich MgO matrix (AgUCs/MgO) are synthesized by a facile impregnation/calcination method and are applied to robust oxygen-promoted formaldehyde reforming into H at room temperature. Density functional theory calculations and experimental observations show that the catalyst spatially builds up a channel for directional electron transfer from electron-rich Ag sites to the anti-bonding π orbital of chemisorbed bridged O molecules, leading to the implementation of low-temperature O adsorption and activation. The catalytically active species, OOH, is thus selectively generated via a preferential two-electron reduction of O with a low energy barrier on Ag sites, involving an unusual long-range proton-coupled electron transfer process. The OOH-AgUCs/MgO active center is efficient for the subsequent C-H activation and H generation, leading to a 3-fold improvement of the turnover frequency as compared with its analogous AgNPs/MgO catalyst. Our atomic-level design and synthetic strategy provide a platform that facilitates the construction of an electron-proton transfer channel for catalysis, altered adsorption configurations of activated reactants, and enhancement of catalytic hydrogen generation activity, extending a promising direction for the development of next-generation energy catalysts.
Reference Key |
chen2019ultrasmallacs
Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using
SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
|
---|---|
Authors | Chen, Shuang;Liang, Shipan;Wu, Biling;Lan, Zhuohuang;Guo, Ziwei;Kobayashi, Hisayoshi;Yan, Xiaoqing;Li, Renhong; |
Journal | ACS applied materials & interfaces |
Year | 2019 |
DOI | 10.1021/acsami.9b11023 |
URL | |
Keywords |
Citations
No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org
Comments
No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.