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- 2009 Annual Meeting
- Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
- Nanoscale Materials as Catalysts I
- (104f) Optically-Tunable, Metallic Nanomaterials for Chemical Sensing and Catalytic Studies
In this talk, we will highlight several synthetic routes to realize bi-metallic nanomaterials with tunable optical properties that are catalytically active. Specifically, we will discuss the synthesis, characterization, and reactivity of AgAu, CuAu, and PtAu nanomaterials created via co-reduction, digestive ripening, plasma reduction of metal-containing micelles, and nanosphere lithography techniques. For instance, using digestive ripening to alloy gold and silver nanoparticles with decylamine ligands, the plasmon frequency could be tuned over a wide range while keeping the particles crystalline with sizes smaller than 10 nm. We will also discuss in situ Raman investigations of catalytic processes, such as selective oxidation and CO scrubbing of H2, on these bi-metallic nanoparticles. With such an approach, operando optical methods, aided by optically- tunable, catalytically-active nanoparticles, can potentially provide deeper understanding of reaction intermediates and chemical processes at nanoparticle surfaces and active sites under realistic conditions.