Publication | Open Access
Nanoporous Gold: Understanding the Origin of the Reactivity of a 21st Century Catalyst Made by Pre-Columbian Technology
149
Citations
103
References
2015
Year
21St Century CatalystEngineeringNanoclusterMetal NanoparticlesPre-columbian TechnologyNanoheterogeneous CatalysisNanocatalysisChemistryChemical EngineeringSouth AmericaNanoengineeringMaterials ScienceCatalytic MaterialNanotechnologyNanomanufacturingCatalysisPlasmonic CatalysisNanomaterialsSingle-atom CatalystCatalyst PreparationCatalytic ReactivityNanoporous Gold
Nanoporous gold (np-Au), a three-dimensional nanoporous bulk material, is made by selective corrosion of Ag from Ag–Au alloys, a technique already applied by the pre-Columbian cultures of South America. Nanoporous gold is actually a Au-rich Ag–Au alloy which, specifically the Ag0.03Au0.97 composition, combines high reactivity and selectivity for a wide variety of oxidation reactions, from simple CO oxidation to complex oxygen-assisted coupling reactions. Its catalytic reactivity is surprising because np-Au is a nonsupported Au catalyst with relatively large feature sizes on the order of tens of nanometers, thus breaking the generally accepted notion that gold must be in the form of small particles (about a few nanometers) to be an active catalyst. The ease of sample preparation in combination with high reactivity, selectivity, and long-term stability suggests that nanoporous gold has the potential to bring Au catalysis closer to practical applications. In this perspective, we provide a critical review of the current understanding of the origin of the high catalytic activity of nanoporous gold in context of morphology and surface composition.
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