University of Utah
chemists demonstrated the first conclusive link between the size of catalyst
particles on a solid surface, their electronic properties and their ability
to speed chemical reactions. The study is a step toward the goal of designing
cheaper, more efficient catalysts to increase energy production, reduce Earth-warming
gases and manufacture a wide variety of goods from medicines to gasoline.
 | | University of Utah chemistry Professor Scott Anderson and doctoral student Bill Kaden work on the elaborate apparatus they use to produce and study catalysts, which are substances that speed chemical reactions without being consumed. The world economy depends on catalysts, and the Utah research is aimed at making cheaper, more efficient catalysts, which could improve energy production and reduce emissions of Earth-warming gases. Credit: William Kunkel, University of Utah. |
Catalysts are substances that speed chemical reactions without being consumed
by the reaction. They are used to manufacture most chemicals and many industrial
products. The world's economy depends on them.
"One of the big uncertainties in catalysis is that no one really understands
what size particles of the catalyst actually make a chemical reaction happen,"
says Scott Anderson, a University of Utah chemistry professor and senior author
of the study in the Friday, Nov. 6 issue of the journal Science. "If we
could understand what factors control activity in catalysts, then we could make
better and less expensive catalysts."
"Most catalysts are expensive noble metals like gold or palladium or platinum,"
he adds. "Say in a gold catalyst, most of the metal is in the form of large
particles, but those large particles are inactive and only nanoparticles with
about 10 atoms are active. That means more than 90 percent of gold in the catalyst
isn't doing anything. If you could make a catalyst with only the right size
particles, you could save 90 percent of the cost or more."
In addition, "there's a huge amount of interest in learning how to make
catalysts out of much less expensive base metals like copper, nickel and zinc,"
Anderson says. "And the way you are going to do that is by 'tuning' their
chemical properties, which means tuning the electronic properties because the
electrons control the chemistry."
The idea is to "take a metal that is not catalytically active and, when
you reduce it to the appropriate size [particles], it can become catalytic,"
Anderson says. "That's the focus of our work – to try to identify
and understand what sizes of metal particles are active as catalysts and why
they are active as catalysts."
In the new study, Anderson and his students took a step toward "tuning"
catalysts to have desired properties by demonstrating, for the first time, that
the size of metal catalyst "nanoparticles" deposited on a surface
affects not only the catalyst's level of activity, but the particles' electronic
properties.
Anderson conducted the study with chemistry doctoral students Bill Kaden and
William Kunkel, and with former doctoral student Tianpin Wu. Kaden was first
author.
The Economy Depends on Catalysts
"Catalysts are a huge part of the economy," Anderson says. "Catalysts
are used for practically every industrial process, from making gasoline and
polymers to pollution remediation and rocket thrusters."
Catalysts are used in 90 percent of U.S. chemical manufacturing processes and
to make more than 20 percent of all industrial products, and those processes
consume large amounts of energy, according to the U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE).
In addition, industry produces 21 percent of U.S. Earth-warming carbon dioxide
emissions – including 3 percent by the chemical industry, DOE says.
Thus, improving the efficiency of catalysts is "the key to both energy
savings and carbon dioxide emissions reductions," the agency says.
Catalysts also are used in drug manufacturing; food processing; fuel cells;
fertilizer production; conversion of natural gas, coal or biomass into liquid
fuels; and systems to reduce pollutants and improve the efficiency of combustion
in energy production.
The North American Catalysis Society says catalysts contribute 35 percent or
more of global Gross Domestic Product. "The biggest part of this contribution
comes from generation of high energy fuels (gasoline, diesel, hydrogen), which
depend critically on the use of small amounts of catalysts in … petroleum
refineries," the group says.
"The development of inexpensive catalysts … is pivotal to energy
capture, conversion and storage," says Henry White, professor and chair
of chemistry at the University of Utah. "This research is vital to the
energy security of the nation."
Catalyst Research: What Previous Studies and the New Study Showed
Many important catalysts – such as those in catalytic converters that
reduce motor vehicle emissions – are made of metal particles that range
in size from microns (millionths of a meter) down to nanometers (billionths
of a meter).
As the size of a catalyst metal particle is reduced into the nanoscale, its
properties initially remain the same as a larger particle, Anderson says. But
when the size is smaller than about 10 nanometers – containing about 10,000
atoms of catalyst – the movements of electrons in the metal are confined,
so their inherent energies are increased.
When there are fewer than about 100 atoms in catalyst particles, the size variations
also result in fluctuations in the electronic structure of the catalyst atoms.
Those fluctuations strongly affect the particles' ability to act as a catalyst,
Anderson says.
Previous experiments documented that electronic and chemical properties of
a catalyst are affected by the size of catalyst particles floating in a gas.
But those isolated catalyst particles are quite different than catalysts that
are mounted on a metal oxide surface – the way the catalyst metal is supported
in real industrial catalysts.
Past experiments with catalysts mounted on a surface often included a wide
variety of particle sizes. So those experiments failed to detect how the catalyst's
chemical activity and electronic properties vary depending with the size of
individual particles.
Anderson was the first American chemist to sort metal catalyst particles by
size and demonstrate how their reactivity changes with size. In previous work,
he studied gold catalyst particles deposited on titanium dioxide.
The new study used palladium particles of specific sizes that were deposited
on titanium dioxide and used to convert carbon monoxide into carbon dioxide.
The study not only showed how catalytic activity varies with catalyst particle
size, "but we have been able to correlate that size dependence with observed
electronic differences in the catalyst particles," Kaden says. "People
had speculated this should be happening, but no one has ever seen it."
Anderson says it is the first demonstration of a strong correlation between
the size and activity of a catalyst on a metal surface and electronic properties
of the catalyst.
Posted November 5th, 2009
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