Author:
Bliem Roland,van der Hoeven Jessi E. S.,Hulva Jan,Pavelec Jiri,Gamba Oscar,de Jongh Petra E.,Schmid Michael,Blaha Peter,Diebold Ulrike,Parkinson Gareth S.
Abstract
Interactions between catalytically active metal particles and reactant gases depend strongly on the particle size, particularly in the subnanometer regime where the addition of just one atom can induce substantial changes in stability, morphology, and reactivity. Here, time-lapse scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and density functional theory (DFT)-based calculations are used to study how CO exposure affects the stability of Pt adatoms and subnano clusters at the Fe3O4(001) surface, a model CO oxidation catalyst. The results reveal that CO plays a dual role: first, it induces mobility among otherwise stable Pt adatoms through the formation of Pt carbonyls (Pt1–CO), leading to agglomeration into subnano clusters. Second, the presence of the CO stabilizes the smallest clusters against decay at room temperature, significantly modifying the growth kinetics. At elevated temperatures, CO desorption results in a partial redispersion and recovery of the Pt adatom phase.
Funder
Austrian Science Fund
NWO-Vici
EC | European Research Council
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
112 articles.
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