Boosting the performance of single-atom catalysts via external electric field polarization

Single-atom catalysts represent a unique catalytic system with high atomic utilization and tunable reaction pathway. Despite current successes in their optimization and tailoring through structural and synthetic innovations, there is a lack of dynamic modulation approach for the single-atom catalysi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2022-06, Vol.13 (1), p.3063-12, Article 3063
Hauptverfasser: Pan, Yanghang, Wang, Xinzhu, Zhang, Weiyang, Tang, Lingyu, Mu, Zhangyan, Liu, Cheng, Tian, Bailin, Fei, Muchun, Sun, Yamei, Su, Huanhuan, Gao, Libo, Wang, Peng, Duan, Xiangfeng, Ma, Jing, Ding, Mengning
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Single-atom catalysts represent a unique catalytic system with high atomic utilization and tunable reaction pathway. Despite current successes in their optimization and tailoring through structural and synthetic innovations, there is a lack of dynamic modulation approach for the single-atom catalysis. Inspired by the electrostatic interaction within specific natural enzymes, here we show the performance of model single-atom catalysts anchored on two-dimensional atomic crystals can be systematically and efficiently tuned by oriented external electric fields. Superior electrocatalytic performance have been achieved in single-atom catalysts under electrostatic modulations. Theoretical investigations suggest a universal “onsite electrostatic polarization” mechanism, in which electrostatic fields significantly polarize charge distributions at the single-atom sites and alter the kinetics of the rate determining steps, leading to boosted reaction performances. Such field-induced on-site polarization offers a unique strategy for simulating the catalytic processes in natural enzyme systems with quantitative, precise and dynamic external electric fields. While single-atom catalysts offer high atomic utilization and tunable reaction pathways, there are still challenges in controlling reactivity. Here, authors use oriented external electric fields to induce electrostatic polarization in metal single-atoms and to boost water-splitting performances.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-30766-x