Rhenium Based Mono- and Bi-metallic Nanoparticles

Rhenium Based Mono- and Bi-metallic Nanoparticles

Author: Tugçe Ayvali

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 283

ISBN-13:

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In this PhD thesis, the synthesis, characterization and preliminary catalytic application of rhenium based mono- and bi-metallic nanoparticles are reported. Rhenium has been chosen as a primary metal given the knowledge of its positive contribution in terms of catalytic activity and selectivity in the hydrogenation of difficult functional groups. Mono-metallic rhenium nanoparticles were prepared by decomposition of [Re2(C3H5)4]. Rhenium-based bimetallic nanoparticles were synthesized by co-decompositions or two-step decomposition of two different rhenium complexes, namely [Re2(CO)10] and [Re2(C3H5)4], with other organometallic complexes such as [Ru(COD)(COT)], [Ru(Me-Allyl)2(COD)], [Pt(CH3)2(COD)] and [Pt(C7H10)3]. By tuning the nature of organometallic complexes and the reaction conditions, rhenium-based bimetallic nanoparticles displaying different morphologies could be quantitatively prepared. The synthesis was carried out in solution under mild pressure of dihydrogen (3 bar) and in the presence of either a polymer (polyvinylpyrolidone) or a weakly coordinating ligand (hexadecylamine) as stabilizing agents. The precise characterization of the so-obtained nanoparticles was performed by using a combination of state-of-the art techniques (WAXS, EXAFS, TEM, HRTEM, STEM-EDX, STEM-HAADF, EA). Surface reactivity studies (norbornene hydrogenation, oxidation and CO adsorption reactions) were also carried out and followed by spectroscopic techniques (NMR, FT-IR) to determine their surface state and apprehend better their interest in catalysis. By this way, useful information could be obtained on their surface chemistry, as following: 1) Hydrides are present on the metallic surface and are very strongly coordinated to rhenium in agreement with rhenium molecular chemistry; 2) CO can substitute hydrides and is also strongly coordinated to the surface of Re but can react further to be substituted, oxidized or dissociated, where the latter is easier on alloy type Re-based bimetallic nanoparticles. 3) Oxidation of pure rhenium and alloy bimetallic ruthenium-rhenium nanoparticles display a zero state core and an oxide shell while core-shell type bimetallic nanoparticles result in amorphous structure. The originality of this work lies on the development of a systematic approach for the preparation of rhenium-based nanoparticles for the first time in the team and in the literature, by applying the organometallic approach largely experienced in the group for other metal systems. This method is well-known as an efficient way to obtain well-controlled nanostructures with clean surfaces, important mainly in catalysis.


Metal Nanoparticles

Metal Nanoparticles

Author: Daniel L. Fedlheim

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2001-10-26

Total Pages: 348

ISBN-13: 9780585404394

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A state-of-the-art reference, Metal Nanoparticles offers the latest research on the synthesis, characterization, and applications of nanoparticles. Following an introduction of structural, optical, electronic, and electrochemical properties of nanoparticles, the book elaborates on nanoclusters, hyper-Raleigh scattering, nanoarrays, and several applications including single electron devices, chemical sensors, biomolecule sensors, and DNA detection. The text emphasizes how size, shape, and surface chemistry affect particle performance throughout. Topics include synthesis and formation of nanoclusters, nanosphere lithography, modeling of nanoparticle optical properties, and biomolecule sensors.


Noble Metal Nanoparticles

Noble Metal Nanoparticles

Author: Ignác Capek

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2017-07-20

Total Pages: 568

ISBN-13: 4431565566

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This book introduces the reader the chemistry of reaction approaches by which noble metal nanoparticles are synthesized, including synthetic approaches using the Brust–Schiffrin method , a high-temperature solution-phase synthesis, polymer and biological entities, weak and strong reducing and capping agents, the low and high temperatures, various additives and various novel approaches such as plasma, ionic liquids, UV light and gamma rays and others. This book starts with a brief overview of foundation work concerned with the chapter topics such as nanomaterials, nanoscience, surface-capping molecules, traditional and nontraditional reduction agents, In addition, chemical and physical properties of noble metal nanoparticles with different structures and elements such as monolayered clusters, nanorods, and bimetallic nanoparticles are described comprehensively. The aim is to summarize the fundamentals and mechanistic approaches in the preparation and characterization of metal colloidal nanoparticles and dispersions. In this way the reader is provided with a systematic and coherent picture of the interesting field of nanoscience based on noble metal colloidal nanoparticles. Intended as a wide-ranging overview, the book is a resource for novices in the field as well as for specialists, particularly those scientists working in the area of nanoparticle synthesis. Nanoscience and nanotechnology are discussed from the chemist’s point of view. Therefore, this volume describes in detail the terms, definitions, theories, experiments, and techniques dealing with the synthesis of noble metal nanoparticles. The material presented here is essential reading for research chemists, technologists, and engineers in the fields of specialty nanomaterials and metal industries, and also is highly valuable for researchers in university, institutional, and governmental laboratories, especially for those at advanced stages of their careers.


Bimetallic Nanoparticles

Bimetallic Nanoparticles

Author: Alexandra Marcela Landry

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 92

ISBN-13:

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Bimetallic nanoparticles can lead to catalysts with improved turnover rates and selectivities, but many synthetic protocols, such as impregnation or precipitation, typically form particles of non-uniform size and composition. Colloidal methods may be able to improve their uniformity, but often require reagents that poison catalytic surfaces (ex. S, B, P). Such compositional non-uniformity and ubiquitous impurities have prevented rigorous conclusions about the consequences of alloying on reactivity and selectivity. Herein, we describe a sequential galvanic displacement-reduction (GDR) colloidal synthesis method using precursors containing only C, H, O, and N, that leads to bimetallic AuPt and PtPd nanoparticles narrowly distributed in size and composition. Au3+ or Pt4+ precursors were added to monometallic Pt or Pd clusters, respectively, whose surface atoms are thermodynamically driven to reduce and deposit the solvated cations onto cluster surfaces due to the lower reduction potentials (E0) of the seed metal relative to the precursor cations (E0Au> E0Pt> E0Pd); oxidized Pt and Pd surface atoms subsequently return to cluster surfaces upon reduction by the solvent, a reductant (ethanol or ethylene glycol, respectively). Such methods have been previously used to synthesize AuPd clusters from Pd seed clusters. TEM micrographs confirm that initial seed cluster sizes increase monotonically with increasing Au3+ or Pt4+ content, with final bimetallic cluster dispersity values near unity indicating a narrow size distribution. UV visible spectroscopy of AuPt cluster suspensions show no plasmon resonance features characteristic of Au nano-sized surfaces, indicating the presence of Pt atoms at bimetallic surfaces, as expected for GDR processes. Elemental analysis by EDS confirmed the formation of strictly bimetallic particles with the mean composition of the synthesis mixture. The GDR model requires that bimetallic growth be proportional to the initial seed surface area, with the number of precursor atoms deposited per surface metal atom of the seed constant and independent of seed metal size. Elemental analysis using EDS supports this hypothesis for thermodynamically favorable alloys such as PtPd and AuPd, but not for AuPt, an unfavorable alloy. These differences appear to reflect the segregation of metals within AuPt clusters during synthesis, placing the metal with the lower surface energy, Au, at cluster surfaces, and decreasing the availability of Pt0 surface atoms for GDR. Consequently, autocatalytic Au3+ reduction on Au0 sites becomes a competitive Au3+ reduction pathway during the synthesis of AuPt clusters. Polymers such as polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP)--which bind to metal surfaces during synthesis via charge-transfer interactions--were required in colloidal suspensions to prevent particle agglomeration in solution, but must be removed prior to catalysis. We show that after depositing clusters on SiO2, PVP can be removed from particle surfaces by post-synthetic treatments at mild temperatures (d"423 K) in reductants such as H2 and/or EtOH without significant particle agglomerations. Reductants compete with the polymer at the metal surface, thus breaking the polymer-metal bond. The absence of surface residues was confirmed by the similar cluster sizes derived from O2 chemisorption and TEM measurements. Larger cluster sizes and surfaces that chemisorb oxygen more weakly--such as Pt relative to Pd--were found to facilitate the removal of PVP from metal particles due to weaker metal-polymer bonds. The model catalytic materials prepared in this study are of both fundamental and practical interest to probe the effects of alloying. Using AuPd and AuPt, we investigate the consequences of alloying with Au on the reactivity of catalyst surfaces saturated with either chemisorbed CO* (CO oxidation) or O* (H2 oxidation) that bind strongly to Pt and Pd surfaces and inhibit rates. Singleton Pt-CO* bond energies, reflected in vibrational CO* stretches, were decoupled from dipole-dipole coupling effects using isotopic dilution methods, and were shown to decrease with increasing catalyst Au content. Despite lower CO* binding energies, CO oxidation turnover rates (normalized per metal surface atom) on AuPt catalysts decreased with increasing Au content. These results show that CO oxidation rates depend weakly on CO* binding energy--consistent with the reported structed insensivity of this reaction--and that Au acts primarily as an inert diluent of the active Pt ensembles required for catalysis. In contrast, H2 oxidation turnover rates (normalized per metal surface atom) on AuPt and AuPd catalysts increase with increasing Au content (up to 11 % at. Au content on AuPt and up to 67 % at. Au content on AuPd), indicating that the reactivity of O* saturated surfaces is more sensitive to changes in adsorbate binding energy than surfaces saturated in CO*, consisted with the reported structure sensitivity of reactions on O* saturated surfaces. Reconstruction of CO* adlayers is facile due to highly mobile CO* molecules, thus allowing CO* adlayers to access configurations that help mitigate strong CO* binding and introduce vacancies. O* adlayers, meanwhile, are more strongly bound to Pt and Pd metal surfaces and less mobile. H2 oxidation rates thus depend more strongly on adsorbate binding energy than CO oxidation rates.


Green Metal Nanoparticles

Green Metal Nanoparticles

Author: Suvardhan Kanchi

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2018-10-16

Total Pages: 720

ISBN-13: 1119418879

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This groundbreaking book uniquely focuses on the exploration of the green synthesis of metal nanoparticles and their characterization and applications. Metal nanoparticles are the basic elements of nanotechnology as they are the primary source used in the design of nanostructured devices and materials. Nanomaterials can be manufactured either incidentally, with physical or chemical methods, or naturally; and the high demand for them has led to their large-scale production by various toxic solvents or high energy techniques. However, due to the growing awareness of environmental and safety issues, the use of clean, nontoxic and environment-friendly ways to synthesize metal nanoparticles has emerged out of necessity. The use of biological resources, such as microbes, plant parts, vegetable wastes, agricultural wastes, gums, etc., has grown to become an alternative way of synthesizing metal nanoparticles. This biogenic synthesis is green, environmentally friendly, cost-effective, and nontoxic. The current multi-authored book includes recent information and builds a database of bioreducing agents for various metal nanoparticles using different precursor systems. Green Metal Nanoparticles also highlights different simple, cost-effective, environment-friendly and easily scalable strategies, and includes parameters for controlling the size and shape of the materials developed from the various greener methods.