Sintering of Catalytic Nanoparticles: Particle Migration or Ostwald Ripening?
Technical University of Denmark · University of New Mexico
Abstract
Metal nanoparticles contain the active sites in heterogeneous catalysts, which are important for many industrial applications including the production of clean fuels, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, and the cleanup of exhaust from automobiles and stationary power plants. Sintering, or thermal deactivation, is an important mechanism for the loss of catalyst activity. This is especially true for high temperature catalytic processes, such as steam reforming, automotive exhaust treatment, or catalytic combustion. With dwindling supplies of precious metals and increasing demand, fundamental understanding of catalyst sintering is very important for achieving clean energy and a clean environment, and for efficient…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 37
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Ostwald ripening
- Sintering
- Particle (ecology)
- Nanoparticle
- Chemical engineering
- Catalysis
- Materials science
- Nanotechnology
- Industry, innovation and infrastructure