화학공학소재연구정보센터
Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.56, No.15, 9225-9234, 2017
In Situ Solid-Gas Reactivity of Nanoscaled Metal Borides from Molten Salt Synthesis
Metal borides have mostly been studied as bulk materials. The nanoscale provides new opportunities to investigate the properties of these materials, e.g., nanoscale hardening and surface reactivity: Metal borides are often considered stable solids because of their covalent character, but little is known on their behavior under a reactive atmosphere, especially reductive gases. We use molten; salt synthesis at 750 degrees C to provide cobalt monoboride (CoB) nanocrystals embedded in an amorphous layer of cobalt(II) and partially oxidized boron. as a model platform to study Morphological, chemical, and structural evolutions of the boride and the superficial layer exposed to argon, dihydrogen (H-2), and a mixture of H-2 and carbon dioxide (CO2) through a multiscale in situ approach: environmental transmission electron microscopy, synchrotron-based near-ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and near-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy. Although the material is stable under argon, H-2 triggers at 400 degrees C decomposition of CoB, leading to cobalt(0) nanoparticles. We then show that H-2 activates CoB for the catalysis of CO2 methanation. A similar decomposition process is also observed on NiB nanocrystals under oxidizing conditions at 300 degrees C. Our work highlights the instability under reactive atmospheres of nanocrystalline cobalt and nickel borides obtained from molten salt synthesis. Therefore, we question the general stability of metal borides with distinct compositions under such conditions. These results shed light on the actual species in metal boride catalysis and provide the framework for future applications of metal borides in their stability domains.