Controlled Synthesis of Nanosized Palladium icosahedra and Their Catalytic Activity towards Formic‐Acid Oxidation
Article 2013 en
Authors
TL
Tian Lv
YW
Yi Wang
SC
Sang‐Il Choi
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract Pd icosahedra with sizes controlled in the range of 5–35 nm were synthesized in high purity through a combination of polyol reduction and seed‐mediated growth. The Pd icosahedra were obtained with purity >94 % and uniform sizes controlled in the range of 5–17 nm by using ethylene glycol as both the reductant and solvent. The studies indicate that the formation of Pd nanocrystals with an icosahedral shape was very sensitive to the reaction kinetics. The success of this synthesis relies on the use of HCl to manipulate the reaction kinetics and thus control the twin structure and shape of the resultant nanocrystals. The size of the Pd icosahedra could be further increased up to 35 nm by seed‐mediated growth, with 17 nm Pd icosahedra serving as seeds. The multiply twinned Pd icosahedra could grow into larger sizes, and their shape and multiply twinned structure were preserved. Thanks to the presence of twin defects, the Pd icosahedra showed a catalytic current density towards formic‐acid oxidation that was 1.9 and 11.6 times higher than that of single‐crystal Pd octahedra, which were also fully covered by {111} facets, and commercial Pd/C, respectively.
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