(310b) Study of Gas-Solid Interaction in Confined Space By in-Situ TEM and Synchrotron X-Ray [Invited] | AIChE

(310b) Study of Gas-Solid Interaction in Confined Space By in-Situ TEM and Synchrotron X-Ray [Invited]

Authors 

Liu, Y. - Presenter, Argonne National Laboratory
The reaction between gas and solid is a great interest for material science and chemical engineering. The attractive topics including the materials transformation in gas environment, gas molecules adsorption/desorption and chemical reaction on the surface. The nanoreactor built with two SiN membranes separated in ~200nm allows the samples in gases while the high energy electron beam and x-ray penetrating the system. The combination of both transmission electron microscope (TEM) and synchrotron x-ray provides the powerful multimodal platform to study the gas-solid reaction in wide range from atomic to mesoscopic scale. This system was employed to study how the AgCl transformed to AgOx at different O2 partial pressure and precious metal nanoparticle stability at elevated temperatures and the effect of size and composition. Also, the cross-platform holder is sharable between the TEM and synchrotron x-ray platforms. It provides the opportunities to study the identical nanoparticles by TEM and hard x-ray nanoprobe to ensure that we get the complimentary information while the particle was in operando, for example the study on the CO2 reduction by Cu2O nanoparticles.

This work was performed at the Center for Nanoscale Materials, a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility, and supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357.

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