Mittwoch 16:00 Uhr - 17:15 Uhr To be determined (hybrid in FIT or online via Zoom)

livMatS Colloquium | Dr. Marc Willinger (ETH Zürich) | Oscillatory Dynamics at Catalytically Active Interfaces Studied by Multi-Scale Operando Electron Microscopy

Abstract
Our aim is to understand processes that lead to the emergence of catalytic function though direct observation using a combination of operando scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Starting with simple model catalysts, such as polycrystalline metal foils, we observe the propagation of chemical waves and reveal how catalytic activity depends on grain orientation, coupling mechanisms and reaction conditions [1]. In the case of redox-reactions on non-noble metals, we find that the active catalyst is operating near a phase-boundary where metallic and oxidized phases co-exist [2]. Real-time imaging reveals fascinating oscillatory redox dynamics that increase in complexity with increasing chemical potential of the gas-phase. When moving from simple model catalysts to industrially relevant metal nanoparticles supported on reducible oxide carriers, we apply in-situ transmission electron microscopy to study effects related to a strong metal-support interaction (SMSI) under reactive conditions [3]. Using the archetypical titania supported platinum nanoparticles as a reference system, and hydrogen oxidation as model redox reaction, it will be shown that the well-described encapsulated state of platinum particles is lost as soon as the system is exposed to a redox-active environment. Structural incoherence at the platinum-titania interface lowers the barrier for redox processes, which give rise to dynamic reconstructions and particle migration. The particle orientation on the support determines the structure of the interface and the resulting particle dynamics, migration, and sintering behaviour. The aim of the presentation is to demonstrate that active catalysts are dynamically adapting to the reaction environment and that catalytic function is related to the catalysts ability to participate in the reaction through reversible changes in its structure and/or (local) composition.

Registration link for talk

Full abstract

Brief Bio
Marc Willinger studied physics at the Technical University in Vienna and obtained his PhD from the Technical University in Berlin for the investigation of the electronic structure of vanadium phosphorous oxides. After a Post Doc at the Department of Inorganic Chemistry of the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society in Berlin, he moved to the University of Aveiro in Portugal, where he had a position as an independent researcher for 4 years. In 2010, he was offered a group-leader position at the Fritz Haber Institute, where he started to develop and implement tools for multi-scale in-situ and operando electron microscopy. In 2015, he took over the lead of a second electron microscopy group at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces. In 2018, he accepted a new position at the Scientific Center of Optical and Electron Microscopy (ScopeM) at the ETH in Zürich, where he is responsible for TEM in material science and the development and implementation of in situ techniques. Marc Willinger is interested in the relation between structure/composition and the resulting physical/chemical properties of materials, especially the emergence of synergistic effects, non-linear dynamics, pattern formation and catalytic activity.