Reversible Temperature-Induced Shape Transition of Pt Nanoparticles Supported on Al2O3

02 October 2025, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Supported platinum catalysts are widely used in industry for hydrogenation reactions. The variations of the electronic and geometric properties of Pt nanoparticles due to temperature can greatly affect their reactivity. In this work, we use in-situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy and environmental transmission electron microscopy to study the effect of H2 and temperature on the shape and electronic properties of 1.8 nm average diameter Pt nanoparticles supported on Al2O3. We utilize actively trained machine learning potentials with uniform acceptance force-bias Monte Carlo (fbMC) to estimate the structural distribution of Pt15/γ-Al2O3(110) clusters at finite temperatures. Our predicted cluster geometries are consistent with experimental data showing the nanoparticles reversibly change shape from 3D hemispheres at low temperatures (35-100 °C) to 2-2.5D rafts at higher temperatures (200-400 °C). Furthermore, experiments and computations indicate that the contraction in Pt-Pt bond distances and higher electron density on Pt at higher temperatures are attributed primarily to the change in nanoparticle shape and associated increased interaction with Al2O3. Our results show the fluxional nature of supported Pt nanoparticles driven by temperature changes.

Keywords

Pt/γ-Al2O3
Pt nanoparticles
in situ spectroscopy
in situ electron microscopy
Monte Carlo simulations
Structural reconstruction

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