The
localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) excitation in plasmonic
nanoparticles has been used to accelerate several catalytic transformations
under visible-light irradiation. In order to fully harness the potential
of plasmonic catalysis, multimetallic nanoparticles containing a plasmonic
and a catalytic component, where LSPR-excited energetic charge carriers
and the intrinsic catalytic active sites work synergistically, have
raised increased attention. Despite several exciting studies observing
rate enhancements, controlling reaction selectivity remains very challenging.
Here, by employing multimetallic nanoparticles combining Au, Ag, and
Pt in an Au@Ag@Pt core–shell and an Au@AgPt nanorattle architectures,
we demonstrate that reaction selectivity of a sequential reaction
can be controlled under visible light illumination. The control of
the reaction selectivity in plasmonic catalysis was demonstrated for
the hydrogenation of phenylacetylene as a model transformation. We
have found that the localized interaction between the triple bond
in phenylacetylene and the Pt nanoparticle surface enables selective
hydrogenation of the triple bond (relative to the double bond in styrene)
under visible light illumination. Atomistic calculations show that
the enhanced selectivity toward the partial hydrogenation product
is driven by distinct adsorption configurations and charge delocalization
of the reactant and the reaction intermediate at the catalyst surface.
We believe these results will contribute to the use of plasmonic catalysis
to drive and control a wealth of selective molecular transformations
under ecofriendly conditions and visible light illumination.
Palladium promotion and deposition on monoclinic zirconia are effective strategies to boost the performance of bulk In2O3 in CO2-to-methanol and could unlock superior reactivity if well integrated into a single catalytic system. However, harnessing synergic effects of the individual components is crucial and very challenging as it requires precise control over their assembly. Herein, we present ternary Pd-In2O3-ZrO2 catalysts prepared by flame spray pyrolysis (FSP) with remarkable methanol productivity and improved metal utilization, surpassing their binary counterparts. Unlike established impregnation and co-precipitation methods, FSP produces materials combining low-nuclearity palladium species associated with In2O3 monolayers highly dispersed on the ZrO2 carrier, whose surface partially transforms from a tetragonal into a monoclinic-like structure upon reaction. A pioneering protocol developed to quantify oxygen vacancies using in situ electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy reveals their enhanced generation because of this unique catalyst architecture, thereby rationalizing its high and sustained methanol productivity.
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