Atomic Crystal Facet Engineering of Core–Shell Nanotetrahedrons Restricted under Sub-10 Nanometer Region
Keying Su, Huaifang Zhang, Shiyun Qian, Jiatian Li, Jiawei Zhu, Yawen Tang, Xiaoyu Qiu
Abstract
Simultaneously engineering the size and surface crystal facets of bimetallic core–shell nanocrystals offers an effective route to not only reduce the extravagance of innermost core metal and maximize the utilization efficiency of shell atoms but also strengthen the core-to-shell interaction via ligand and/or strain effects. Herein, we systematically study the architecture transition and crystal facet engineering at the atomic level on the surface of sub-5 nm Pd(111) tetrahedrons (Ths), aimed at embodying how the variations in the local facet and shape of a sub-10 nm core–shell structure affect its surface geometrical properties and electronic structures. Specifically, surface atomic replication is predominant when the shell metal deposits less than five atomic layers, thus forming a series of Pd@M (M = Pt, Ru, and Rh) core–shell Ths enclosed by (111) facets (∼6.8 nm), while over five atomic layers, spontaneous facets tropism of each metal is predominant, where Pt atoms still follow fcc-(111) packing, Ru atoms select hcp-phase stacking, and Rh atoms choose fcc-(100) crystallization, respectively. In particular, Pt atoms take a seamless geometrical transformation from Pd@Pt Ths into Pd@Pt truncated octahedrons (TOhs, ∼7.6 nm). As a proof-of-concept application, such sub-10 nm core–shell architectures with Pt skin show a component-dependent relationship toward oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), where the catalytic activity follows the order of Pd@Pt(111) TOhs (E1/2 = 0.916 V, 1.632 A mgPt–1) > Pd@Pt(111) Ths > Pt black. Meanwhile the Ru skin show a facet-dependent relationship toward acidic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) where the catalytic activity follows the order of Pd@Ru(111) Ths > Pd@Ru(hcp) Ths > Pd Ths.