4.7 Article

Nitrogen-skinned carbon nanocone enables non-dynamic electrochemistry of individual metal particles

Journal

SCIENCE CHINA-CHEMISTRY
Volume 65, Issue 10, Pages 2031-2037

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11426-022-1305-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21721003, 21635007]
  2. Instrument Developing Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [YJKYYQ20210003]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Jilin Province [20210101402JC]

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Nano-impact electrochemistry is an efficient method for investigating the properties of individual particles. By using a nitrogen-skinned carbon nanocone electrode, the adsorption capacity towards metal particles is greatly enhanced, allowing for non-dynamic single particle analysis. This strategy effectively addresses the main challenge in general single metal particle collision analysis.
Nano-impact electrochemistry is an efficient way to probe the physical and chemical properties of individual particles. Unfortunately, limited by the weak adsorption between particles and a microelectrode (ME), the particle collision events evolve randomly to be elastic or inelastic. These events occur intermittently to produce unmarked transient signal sets that seriously interfere with single particle measurement. Here, we report a nitrogen-skinned carbon nanocone electrode (NS-CNCE) to enhance its adsorption capacity greatly towards metal particles and thus realize non-dynamic (i.e., inelastic impacts) single particle analysis. The surface of NS-CNCEs characteristic of excellent adhesion, smoothness, and conductivity can effectively capture the landing metal particles to form a stable contact for efficient electronic communication. Using superior NS-CNCEs, we investigated electrochemical oxidation of Ag (or Au) particles and electrocatalytic amplification of Pt particles, respectively, under non-dynamic electrochemistry. The determined particle size is highly consistent with the physical characterization. Statistical analysis of transient signals confirms the strong adhesion of NS-CNCEs to metal particles, which is also in line with the prediction of a particle-electrode adsorption energy model. The proposed strategy has effectively solved the major challenge of general single metal particle collision analysis.

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