Litcius/Paper detail

Periodic One-Dimensional Single-Atom Arrays

Lingxiao Wang, Jing Wang, Xiaoping Gao, Cai Chen, Yunli Da, Sicong Wang, Jia Yang, Zhiyuan Wang, Jia Song, Tao Yao, Wu Zhou, Huang Zhou, Yuen Wu

2022Journal of the American Chemical Society64 citationsDOI

Abstract

The orderly assembly of single atoms into highly periodic aggregates at the nanoscale is an intriguing but challenging process of high-precision atomic manufacturing. Here, we discover that an in-plane film surface shrinkage can induce molecular self-assembly to arrange single atoms with unconventional distribution, contributing them to periodic one-dimensional segregation on carbon stripes (one-dimensional single-atom arrays (SAA)). This originates from the fact that metal phthalocyanine (MPc) molecules gradually aggregate and melt to form a film under a thermal drive and the help of sodium chloride templates, accompanied by surface shrinkage, self-assembly, and deep carbonization. At the nanoscale, these periodic parallel arrays are formed due to MPc molecular interactions by π-π stacking. At the atomic scale, the single atoms are stabilized by the vertical phthalocyanine-derived multilayer graphene. This can significantly modify the electronic structure of the single-atom sites on the outermost graphene (e.g., Fe-based SAA), thus optimizing the adsorption energy of oxygen intermediates and resulting in a superior oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) performance concerning disordered single atoms. Our findings provide a general route for orderly single-atom manufacturing (e.g., Fe, Co, and Cu) and an understanding of the relationship between orderly allocation and catalytic performance.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryStackingAtom (system on chip)PhthalocyanineNanoscopic scaleChemical physicsGraphenePlanarity testingCarbonizationAdsorptionCarbon fibersNanotechnologyCatalysisCrystallographyPhysical chemistryMaterials scienceOrganic chemistryComposite materialEmbedded systemComputer scienceComposite numberElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionMolecular Junctions and NanostructuresGraphene research and applications