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Main Authors: Owen, Cameron J., Russotto, Lorenzo, O'Connor, Christopher R., Marcella, Nicholas, Johansson, Anders, Musaelian, Albert, Kozinsky, Boris
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.13607
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author Owen, Cameron J.
Russotto, Lorenzo
O'Connor, Christopher R.
Marcella, Nicholas
Johansson, Anders
Musaelian, Albert
Kozinsky, Boris
author_facet Owen, Cameron J.
Russotto, Lorenzo
O'Connor, Christopher R.
Marcella, Nicholas
Johansson, Anders
Musaelian, Albert
Kozinsky, Boris
contents Multi-component metal nanoparticles (NPs) are of paramount importance in the chemical industry, as most processes therein employ heterogeneous catalysts. While these multi-component systems have been shown to result in higher product yields, improved selectivities, and greater stability through catalytic cycling, the structural dynamics of these materials in response to various stimuli (e.g. temperature, adsorbates, etc.) are not understood with atomistic resolution. Here, we present a highly accurate equivariant machine-learned force field (MLFF), constructed from ab initio training data collected using Bayesian active learning, that is able to reliably simulate PdAu surfaces and NPs in response to thermal treatment as well as exposure to reactive H$_2$ atmospheres. We thus provide a single model that is able to reliably describe the full space of geometric and chemical complexity for such a heterogeneous catalytic system across single crystals, gas-phase interactions, and NPs reacting with H$_2$, including catalyst degradation and explicit reactivity. Ultimately, we provide direct atomistic evidence that verifies existing experimental hypotheses for bimetallic catalyst deactivation under reaction conditions, namely that Pd preferentially segregates into the Au bulk through aggressive catalytic cycling and that this degradation is site-selective, as well as the reactivity for hydrogen exchange as a function of Pd ensemble size. We demonstrate that understanding of the atomistic evolution of these active sites is of the utmost importance, as it allows for design and control of material structure and corresponding performance, which can be vetted in silico.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2407_13607
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Atomistic evolution of active sites in multi-component heterogeneous catalysts
Owen, Cameron J.
Russotto, Lorenzo
O'Connor, Christopher R.
Marcella, Nicholas
Johansson, Anders
Musaelian, Albert
Kozinsky, Boris
Materials Science
Applied Physics
Chemical Physics
Multi-component metal nanoparticles (NPs) are of paramount importance in the chemical industry, as most processes therein employ heterogeneous catalysts. While these multi-component systems have been shown to result in higher product yields, improved selectivities, and greater stability through catalytic cycling, the structural dynamics of these materials in response to various stimuli (e.g. temperature, adsorbates, etc.) are not understood with atomistic resolution. Here, we present a highly accurate equivariant machine-learned force field (MLFF), constructed from ab initio training data collected using Bayesian active learning, that is able to reliably simulate PdAu surfaces and NPs in response to thermal treatment as well as exposure to reactive H$_2$ atmospheres. We thus provide a single model that is able to reliably describe the full space of geometric and chemical complexity for such a heterogeneous catalytic system across single crystals, gas-phase interactions, and NPs reacting with H$_2$, including catalyst degradation and explicit reactivity. Ultimately, we provide direct atomistic evidence that verifies existing experimental hypotheses for bimetallic catalyst deactivation under reaction conditions, namely that Pd preferentially segregates into the Au bulk through aggressive catalytic cycling and that this degradation is site-selective, as well as the reactivity for hydrogen exchange as a function of Pd ensemble size. We demonstrate that understanding of the atomistic evolution of these active sites is of the utmost importance, as it allows for design and control of material structure and corresponding performance, which can be vetted in silico.
title Atomistic evolution of active sites in multi-component heterogeneous catalysts
topic Materials Science
Applied Physics
Chemical Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.13607