Real-Time Atomic-Scale Visualization of Reversible Copper Surface Activation during the CO Oxidation Reaction

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2020 Feb 3;59(6):2505-2509. doi: 10.1002/anie.201915024. Epub 2019 Dec 30.

Abstract

By using in situ aberration-corrected environmental transmission electron microscopy, for the first time at atomic level, the dynamic evolution of the Cu surface is captured during CO oxidation. Under reaction conditions, the Cu surface is activated, typically involving 2-3 atomic layers with the formation of a reversible metastable phase that only exists during catalytic reactions. The distinctive role of CO and O2 in the surface activation is revealed, which features CO exposure to lead to surface roughening and consequently formation of low-coordinated Cu atoms, while O2 exposure induces a quasi-crystalline CuOx phase. Supported by DFT calculations, it is shown that crystalline CuOx reversibly transforms into the amorphous phase, acting as an active species to facilitate the interaction of gas reactants and catalyzing CO oxidation.

Keywords: CO oxidation; atomic scale; copper; electron microscopy; environmental TEM.