Curved crystals are a simple but powerful approach to bridge the gap between single crystal surfaces and nanoparticle catalysts, by allowing a rational assessment of the role of active step sites in gas-surface reactions. Using a curved Rh(111) crystal, here, we investigate the effect of A-type (square geometry) and B-type (triangular geometry) atomic packing of steps on the catalytic CO oxidation on Rh at millibar pressures. Imaging the crystal during reaction ignition with laser-induced CO2fluorescence demonstrates a two-step process, where B-steps ignite at lower temperature than A-steps. Such fundamental dissimilarity is explained in ambient pressure X-ray photoemission (AP-XPS) experiments, which reveal partial CO desorption and oxygen buildup only at B-steps. AP-XPS also proves that A-B step asymmetries extend to the active stage: at A-steps, low-active O-Rh-O trilayers buildup immediately after ignition, while highly active chemisorbed O is the dominant species on B-type steps. We conclude that B-steps are more efficient than A-steps for the CO oxidation.
CITATION STYLE
García-Martínez, F., Rämisch, L., Ali, K., Waluyo, I., Bodero, R. C., Pfaff, S., … Ortega, J. E. (2022). Structure Matters: Asymmetric CO Oxidation at Rh Steps with Different Atomic Packing. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 144(33), 15363–15371. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c06733
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.