The molecular and ensemble dynamics for the growth of hierarchical supercrystals of cobalt nanorods have been studied by in situ tandem X-ray absorption spectroscopy-small-angle X-ray scattering (XAS-SAXS). The supercrystals were obtained by reducing a Co(II) precursor under H2 in the presence of a long-chain amine and a long-chain carboxylic acid. Complementary time-dependent ex situ TEM studies were also performed. The experimental data provide critical insights into the nanorod growth mechanism and unequivocal evidence for a concerted growth-organization process. Nanorod formation involves cobalt nucleation, a fast atom-by-atom anisotropic growth, and a slower oriented attachment process that continues well after cobalt reduction is complete. Smectic-like ordering of the nanorods appears very early in the process, as soon as nanoparticle elongation appears, and nanorod growth takes place inside organized superlattices, which can be regarded as mesocrystals.
The Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS) is a structure-sensitive exothermic reaction that enables catalytic transformation of syngas to high quality liquid fuels. Now, monolithic cobalt-based heterogeneous catalysts were elaborated through a wet chemistry approach that allows control over nanocrystal shape and crystallographic phase, while at the same time enables heat management. Copper and nickel foams have been employed as supports for the epitaxial growth of hcp-Co nanowires directly from a solution containing a coordination compound of cobalt and stabilizing ligands. The Co/Cu catalyst was tested for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis in a fixed-bed reactor, showing stability and significantly superior activity and selectivity towards C5+ compared to a Co/SiO -Al O reference catalyst under the same conditions.
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