4.8 Article

Super-Resolution Electrogenerated Chemiluminescence Microscopy for Single-Nanocatalyst Imaging

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 44, Pages 18511-18518

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c07827

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation [22034003, 21974061, 22074063]

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The super-resolution ECLM technique allows for high-resolution imaging of single nanoparticles' catalytic activity, revealing surface characteristics of nanocatalysts. This technology has great potential applications in catalysis, biological imaging, and single-entity analysis.
Electrogenerated chemiluminescence microscopy (ECLM) provides a real-time imaging approach to visualize the surface-dependent catalytic activity of nanocatalysts, which helps to rationalize the design of catalysts. In this study, we first propose super-resolution ECLM that could measure the facet- and site-specific activities of a single nanoparticle with nanometer resolution. The stochastic nature of the ECL emission makes the generation of photons obey Poisson statistics, which fits the requirement of super-resolution radial fluctuation (SRRF). By processing an SRRF algorithm, the spatial resolution of ECL images achieved ca. 100 nm, providing more abundant details on electrocatalytic reactivities at the subparticle level. Beyond conventional wide-field ECL imaging, super-resolution ECLM provided the spatial distribution of catalytic activities at a Au nanorod and nanoplate with scales of a few hundred nanometers. It helped uncover the facet- and defect-dependent surface activity, as well as the dynamic fluctuation of reactivity patterns on single nanoparticles. The super-resolution ECLM provides high spatiotemporal resolution, which shows great potential in the field of catalysis, biological imaging, and single-entity analysis.

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