Abstract
The stability and activity of supported single-atom catalysts (SACs) represent critical yet opposing factors limiting our ability to explore and exploit their unique properties. This study demonstrates the operation of a switchable catalyst that is activated in the presence of surface intermediates and reverts to a stable but inactive form when the reaction is completed. We employ atomically defined Rh/Fe3O4(001) catalysts to demonstrate how structurally stable Rh, bound in surface octahedral Fe sites, gets destabilized to form highly active Rh adatoms and small clusters. Conversion of formic acid, leading initially to surface formate and hydroxyl species, is employed as a model reaction to probe the dynamics of such processes. We find that surface hydroxyl recombination to water through the Mars-van Krevelen mechanism reduces Rh coordination, triggering its conversion to active Rh adatoms. Since such lattice oxygen exchange is observed in many acid-base and redox chemistries, the process can be broadly applicable to controlling the activation of the range of SACs.
Supplementary materials
Title
Methods, Suplementary experimental and theoretical results
Description
Materials and methods, Rh 3d XPS of 0.05 Rh/u.c., Formic acid TPRS on 1.0 Rh/u.c., XPS Fe 2p with formic acid and atomic deuterium, Repeat TPRS on 1.0 Rh/u.c. and 0.17 Rh/u.c., image of DFT slab model used, full DFT calculated mechanism of adatom to octahedral conversion, DFT calculations of hydroxylated Rh octahedral surfaces, adsorption energy diagram of different Rh surfaces, tables of relative energies along adatom to octahedral conversion, slabs of different hydroxyl positions tested, and table of energies for different hydroxyl positions.
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