News Release

Graphene-confined ultrafast radiant heating for overcoming the trade-off between subnanometer size and high metal loading in meta cluster catalysts

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Science China Press

Schematic and application of the GCURH method.

image: The GCURH method is capable of providing microseconds scale of high-temperature pulse with a heating/cooling rate of 10^9 °C/s, and thus be applied to precisely synthesis of sub-nanometer metal cluster catalysts with high metal loadings. view more 

Credit: ©Science China Press

This study is led by Prof. Zhong-Qun Tian (Xiamen University) and Prof. Kostya S. Novoselov (National University of Singapore). Originating from the ultrafast laser-to-thermal conversion capacity and the impermeable, flexible features of graphene, Dr. Ye-Chuang Han (primary author) and Prof. Zhong-Qun Tian conceived the idea and chosen graphene as the diffusion-constrained nanoreactor for high-temperature reactions. In one pulse of nanosecond laser irradiation, they found the irradiated area of graphene achieves a surprisingly high heating/cooling rate of 10^9 °C/s, and named the heating method as graphene-confined ultrafast radiant heating (GCURH) (see image below). Furthermore, through collaborating with Dr. Jun Yi (co-first author) and Prof. Kostya S. Novoselov, they performed the theoretical calculations and found that such an ultrafast cooling process is in accord with Stefan-Boltzmann law, and radiation become the primary mode of energy release at elevated temperatures.

Given that thermally activated ultrafast diffusion, collision and combination of metal atoms are fundamental processes for synthesizing burgeoning subnanometer metal clusters, and no method has allowed the kinetically controllable synthesis of subnanometer metal clusters while not compromise metal loading. Dr. Ye-Chuang Han and Dr. Beibei Pang (co-first author, University of Science and Technology of China) demonstrated that kinetics-driven GCURH method is capable of synthesizing subnanometer Co cluster catalysts with high metal loading up to 27.1 wt% by pyrolyzing a Co-based metal-organic framework in microseconds, representing one of the highest size-loading combinations and the quickest rate for MOF pyrolysis in the reported literature.

Overall, this work provides a general strategy to overcome the trade-off between ultrasmall size and high loading in metal cluster catalysts, and holds great promise for the upcoming industrial applications of cluster catalysts.

###

See the article:

Graphene-confined ultrafast radiant heating for high-loading subnanometer metal cluster catalysts

https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwad081


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.