The microscopic insight into how and why catalytically active nanoparticles change their shape during oxidation and reduction reactions is a pivotal challenge in the fundamental understanding of heterogeneous catalysis. We report an oxygen-induced shape transformation of rhodium nanoparticles on magnesium oxide (001) substrates that is lifted upon carbon monoxide exposure at 600 kelvin. A Wulff analysis of high-resolution in situ x-ray diffraction, combined with transmission electron microscopy, shows that this phenomenon is driven by the formation of a oxygen-rhodium-oxygen surface oxide at the rhodium nanofacets. This experimental access into the behavior of such nanoparticles during a catalytic cycle is useful for the development of improved heterogeneous catalysts.
Stable emission in glass
Lead halide perovskites can exhibit bright, narrow band photoluminescence but have stability issues related to formation of inactive phases and the loss of lead ions. Hou
et al
. show that the black, photoactive phase of cesium lead iodide can be stabilized by forming a composite with a glassy phase of a metal-organic framework through liquid-phase sintering. The photoluminescence is at least two orders of magnitude greater than that of the pure perovskite. The glass stabilizes the perovskite under high laser excitation, and about 80% of the photoluminescence was maintained after 10,000 hours of water immersion. —PDS
Li‐rich layered oxides are promising cathode materials for next‐generation Li‐ion batteries because of their extraordinary specific capacity. However, the activation process of the key active component Li2MnO3 in Li‐rich materials is kinetically slow, and the complex phase transformation with electrode/electrolyte side reactions causes fast capacity/voltage fading. Herein, a simple thermal treatment strategy is reported to simultaneously tackle these challenges. The introduction of a urea thermal treatment on Li‐rich material Li1.87Mn0.94Ni0.19O3 leads to oxygen deficiencies and partially reduced Mn ions on the oxide surface for activating the Li‐rich phase. In situ synchrotron study confirms that the urea‐treated cathode shows much faster Li extraction from both Li and transition metal layers with less oxygen evolution upon charging than that of untreated counterparts. Moreover, the decomposition products of urea during thermal treatment subsequently deposit on the surface of cathode material, leading to a unique passivation layer against side reactions between electrode and electrolyte. Soft X‐ray absorption spectroscopy reveals the structural evolution mechanism with a significantly suppressed dissolution of Mn species over cycling measurement. The urea‐treated Li1.87Mn0.94Ni0.19O3 shows accelerated activation kinetics to reach high capacity of 270 mA h g–1 and demonstrates excellent capacity retention of 98.49% over 300 cycles with slower voltage decay.
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