Advancing the Frontiers in Nanocatalysis, Biointerfaces, and Renewable Energy Conversion by Innovations of Surface Techniques

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The challenge of chemistry in the 21st century is to achieve 100% selectivity of the desired product molecule in multipath reactions ("green chemistry") and develop renewable energy based processes. Surface chemistry and catalysis play key roles in this enterprise. Development of in situ surface techniques such as high-pressure scanning tunneling microscopy, sum frequency generation (SFG) vibrational spectroscopy, time-resolved Fourier transform infrared methods, and ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy enabled the rapid advancement of three fields: nanocatalysts, biointerfaces, and renewable energy conversion chemistry. In materials nanoscience, synthetic methods have been developed to produce monodisperse metal and oxide nanoparticles (NPs) in the 0.8-10 nm range with controlled shape, oxidation states, and composition; these NPs, can be used as selective catalysts since chemical selectivity appears to be dependent on all of these experimental parameters. New spectroscopic and microscopic techniques have been developed that operate under reaction conditions and reveal the dynamic change of molecular structure of catalysts and adsorbed molecules as the reactions proceed with changes in reaction intermediates, catalyst composition, and oxidation states. SFG vibrational spectroscopy detects amino acids, peptides, and proteins adsorbed at hydrophobic and hydrophilic interfaces and monitors the change of surface structure and interactions with coadsorbed water. Exothermic reactions and photons generate hot electrons in metal NPs that may be utilized in chemical energy conversion. The photosplitting of water and carbon dioxide, an important research direction in renewable energy conversion, is discussed.
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Issue Date
2009-11
Language
English
Article Type
Review
Keywords

SUM-FREQUENCY GENERATION; FT-IR SPECTROSCOPY; SCANNING-TUNNELING-MICROSCOPY; CATALYTIC CO OXIDATION; BLODGETT MONOLAYER FORMATION; OXYGEN-EVOLVING CATALYST; SINGLE-CRYSTAL SURFACES; VIBRATIONAL SPECTROSCOPY; MESOPOROUS SILICA; PLATINUM NANOPARTICLES

Citation

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, v.131, no.46, pp.16589 - 16605

ISSN
0002-7863
DOI
10.1021/ja9061954
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/20658
Appears in Collection
EEW-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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