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19 Aug 11:44

Two‐Sidedness of Surface Reaction Mediation

by Haoran Chen, Hao Zhu, Zhichao Huang, Wenhui Rong, Kai Wu
Advanced Materials Two‐Sidedness of Surface Reaction Mediation

A surface reaction can be efficiently mediated by various strategies, which are explored from the perspectives of the surface and molecule manipulations as well as their interlinked effects. In addition to the reaction temperature, such two‐sidedness for the surface reaction mediation is related to the pre‐exponential factor and the energy barrier in the Arrhenius equation.


Abstract

A heterogeneous catalytic process involves many surface elementary steps that affect the overall catalytic performance in one way or another. In general, a high‐performance heterogeneous catalyst should meet the main criteria: excellent catalytic activity and high selectivity toward target products. Using surface science techniques, the two‐sidedness of the surface reaction mediations can be explored, from the perspectives of the surface and the molecule manipulations. The surface manipulation refers to a reaction that is mediated by composition and structure of the substrate as well as surface species, while the molecular manipulation relates to a reaction that is mediated by the reacting molecule via the precursor selection, environmental control, or external excitation. The best catalytic system should consist of the most efficient catalyst and the best suitable reacting molecule, in addition to its economic benefit and environmental amity. Recent research progress in surface reaction mediation is outlined, and its two‐sidedness is governed by the Arrhenius equation. This should shed new light on the connection between basic theory and surface reaction mediation strategies. To conclude, challenges and possible opportunities are elaborated for efficient surface reaction mediations.