Materials with well-defined surfaces
are drawing increased
attention
for the design of bespoke catalysts and nanomaterials. Gaining a detailed
understanding of the surfaces of these materials is an important challenge,
which is often complicated by surface polymorphism and dynamic restructuring.
We introduce the use of surface-enhanced NMR spectroscopy for the
observation of such surfaces, focusing on LaScO3 as an
example. We show that double-resonance NMR experiments correlating
surface oxygen and probe molecules to the 139La and 45Sc nuclei at the surface reveal the material to be terminated
by a ScO
x
monolayer. Surface-selective 17O and 45Sc NMR experiments further showed the
material to be hydroxyl terminated and that the surface may be prone
to dynamic restructuring as a result of moisture exposure. Perhaps
most interestingly, surface-selective 139La NMR experiments
revealed the existence of previously undetected surface lanthanum
defects, suggesting that surface-enhanced NMR may be useful as a guide
in the synthesis of defect-free surfaces in the design of various
nanomaterials.