Detailed understanding of structure sensitivity, a central theme in heterogeneous catalysis, is important to guide the synthesis of improved catalysts. Progress is hampered by our inability to accurately enumerate specific… Click to show full abstract
Detailed understanding of structure sensitivity, a central theme in heterogeneous catalysis, is important to guide the synthesis of improved catalysts. Progress is hampered by our inability to accurately enumerate specific active sites on ubiquitous metal nanoparticle catalysts. We employ herein atomistic simulations based on a force field trained with quantum-chemical data to sample the shape of cobalt particles as a function of their size. Algorithms rooted in pattern recognition are used to identify surface atom arrangements relevant to CO dissociation, the key step in the Fischer–Tropsch (FT) reaction. The number of step-edge sites that can catalyze C–O bond scission with a low barrier strongly increases for larger nanoparticles in the range of 1–6 nm. Combined with microkinetics of the FT reaction, we can reproduce experimental FT activity trends. The stabilization of step-edge sites correlates with increasing stability of terrace nanoislands on larger nanoparticles.
               
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