Abstract
Bimetallic alloys have emerged as an important class of catalytic materials, spanning a wide range of shapes, sizes, and compositions. The combinatorics across this wide materials space makes predicting catalytic turnovers of individual active sites challenging. Herein, we introduce the stability of active sites as a descriptor for site-resolved reaction rates. The site stability unifies structural and compositional variations in a single descriptor. We compute this descriptor using coordination-based models trained with DFT calculations. Our approach enables instantaneous predictions of catalytic turnovers for nanostructures up to 12 nm in size. Using NO dissociation as probe reaction, we identify that octahedral Au-Pt core-shell nanoparticles and 3 nm 0.5:0.5 AuPt random alloys yield greater than 10 times higher compared to monometallic Pt nanoparticles. By prescribing specific sizes, morphologies, and compositions of optimal catalytic nanoparticles, our method provides tailored guidance to experiments for rationally designing bimetallic catalysts.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting material: Assessing Catalytic Rates of Bimetallic Nanoparticles with Active Site Specificity - A Case Study using NO Decompositio
Description
Detailed description of methods. Additional figures, results, analysis, and discussion.
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Supplementary weblinks
Title
Structures and energies
Description
DFT computed binding energies and optimized structures of Pt dimers and trimers on fcc (100), (111), and (211) surfaces of Au, Ag, Cu, Pt, Pd, Rh, Ir. Also, adsorption energies and optimized structures of NO, N, and O onto the Pt dimers and trimers at the abovementioned surfaces.
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Scripts microkinetic model and binding energies
Description
Python scripts for evaluating the binding energies of Pt sites on bimetallic nanoparticles. In addition, scripts for solving the microkinetic model for NO demoposition on Pt sites using the binding energy of the site as input
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