4.8 Article

Atomic Scale Characterization of Fluxional Cation Behavior on Nanoparticle Surfaces: Probing Oxygen Vacancy Creation/Annihilation at Surface Sites

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 2624-2634

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c07584

Keywords

oxygen vacancy; fluxional behavior; transmission electron microscopy; ceria; nanoparticle surfaces; in situ; cation displacements

Funding

  1. [NSF DMR-1308085]

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The study characterized the variation of oxygen vacancy creation and annihilation rates on oxide nanoparticle surfaces using in situ transmission electron microscopy, revealing that low coordination number sites and locally strained sites exhibit enhanced surface oxygen vacancy activity.
Oxygen vacancy creation and annihilation are key processes in nonstoichiometric oxides such as CeO2. The oxygen vacancy creation and annihilation rates on an oxide's surface partly govern its ability to exchange oxygen with the ambient environment, which is critical for a number of applications including energy technologies, environmental pollutant remediation, and chemical synthesis. Experimental methods to probe and correlate local oxygen vacancy reaction rates with atomic-level structural heterogeneities would provide significant information for the rational design and control of surface functionality; however, such methods have been unavailable to date. Here, we characterize picoscale fluxional behavior in cations using time-resolved in situ aberration-corrected transmission electron microscopy to locate atomic-level variations in oxygen vacancy creation and annihilation rates on oxide nanoparticle surfaces. Low coordination number sites such as steps and edges, as well as locally strained sites, exhibited the greatest number of cation displacements, implying enhanced surface oxygen vacancy activity at these sites. The approach has potential applications to a much wider class of materials and catalysis problems involving surface and interfacial transport functionalities.

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