The exposed nature of the gold surface in
Janus nanoparticle gold-titania hybrids (left) leads to greater catalytic
activity than eccentric (center) and concentric (right) structure. The
protective titania coating confers durability on the catalyst.
© 2011 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA,
Weinheim
Hybrid 'Janus' nanoparticles made from gold
and titania have high catalytic activity and extraordinary durability
As
recently as twenty-five years ago, chemists considered gold to be one of the
most inert metallic elements, until the discovery that nanoscale-sized
dispersions of gold had high catalytic activity forced a re-think of old
principles. Researchers soon found that gold nanoparticles could promote many
industrially important reactions, such as the removal of harmful carbon
monoxide gas from emission streams. Whilst the benefits of nanoscale gold are
well-attested, preparing the material in a durable and reusable form remains a
significant challenge that limits its uptake by manufacturers.
Work by
the teams of Ming-Yong Han of the Institute of Materials Research and
Engineering and Yong-Wei Zhang from the Institute of High Performance Computing
both at A*STAR has revealed that the stability of gold nanoparticle catalysts
can be enhanced by coating them with protective titania (TiO2) layers1.
Conceived by co-author Zhi Wei Seh, an A*STAR National Science Scholar, this
new technique produces so-called Janus nanostructures that retain nearly all
the catalytic activity of bare gold nanoparticles without suffering from
irreversible aggregation that diminishes the reactivity of the latter.
Named
after the twin-faced Roman god of beginnings and transitions, Janus nanostructures
join two or more equal-sized components together through very small junctions —
an arrangement that maximizes the active surface area of each substance. The
beneficial effects of pairing gold nanoparticles with titania is well known,
but until the work by A*STAR researchers, a detailed understanding of the
mechanism by which these two species fuse together had proved elusive.
Han and
co-workers used an unconventional chelating compound called titanium
diisopropoxide bis(acetylacetonate) to nucleate the growth of TiO2 onto gold at
extremely slow rates. By carefully controlling the addition of this reagent to
rod- and spherical-shaped gold nanoparticles, the researchers observed three
distinct nanostructures (see image): a Janus geometry; a partially
encapsulating ‘eccentric’ geometry; and a ‘concentric’ core-shell arrangement.
Catalytic
experiments revealed that the reactivity and durability of gold-titania Janus
structures have unique advantages over other nanoparticles. Due to the exposed
nature of their gold surfaces, the former catalyze the reduction of the
molecule 4-nitro phenol at much faster rates than eccentric and concentric
nanoparticles whose gold surfaces are more confined. Furthermore, the
protective TiO2 coating of the hybrid catalysts allowed them to be reused
repeatedly with little loss of activity. In contrast, bare gold nanoparticles
agglomerated into un-reactive clumps after just five usage cycles.
Futher
theoretical investigations by the team revealed that the formation of Janus
nanostructures as the energetically stable species is promoted by the addition
of smaller volumes of the titania precursor — a finding that may help the
researchers generate other metal–oxide hybrids for catalytic applications in
the near future.
The
A*STAR-affiliated researchers contributing to this research are from the Institute of Materials Research and
Engineering and the Institute
of High Performance Computing
References
- Seh, Z. W. et
al. Anisotropic growth of titania onto various gold nanostructures:
Synthesis, theoretical understanding, and optimization for catalysis. Angewandte
Chemie International Edition 50, 10140–10143 (2011). | article
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