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Imaging interface-controlled bulk oxygen spillover

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Why This Matters

This research uncovers a new mechanism of oxygen spillover involving bulk transport through the metal-support interface, rather than just surface diffusion. It highlights the importance of engineered interfaces in catalysts for improved reaction efficiency, which could lead to more effective industrial processes and cleaner energy solutions. Understanding this process opens avenues for designing advanced catalysts with enhanced performance and durability.

Key Takeaways

As one dynamic aspect of catalysis, spillover is known as species diffusion between an active metal and its support1,2,3, especially in reactions involving hydrogen and oxygen4,5,6,7,8. Spillover confined on the catalyst surface has been investigated extensively9,10; however, it remains unclear whether the bulk catalyst participates in the reactions through non-surface spillover. Here we track the oxygen spillover in Ru/TiO 2 catalysts using in situ environmental transmission electron microscopy. Lattice oxygen was found to transport directly from the TiO 2 substrate to the supported Ru particles through the Ru/TiO 2 interface instead of the traditionally expected surface diffusion11. As a result, the TiO 2 lattice at the subsurface was strained reversibly to provide channels for oxygen transport, as detected by the picometre-precision tracing of atomic displacement. The structural adaptability at the metal–support interface is critical for controlling oxygen spillover, which is switched on in Ru/rutile-TiO 2 but switched off in Ru/anatase-TiO 2 . As shown by the real-time atom-resolved evidence, this bulk oxygen spillover is generally viable in supported metal catalysts of an interfacial epitaxy nature and demonstrates the significance of rationally engineered metal–support interfaces for activating the oxygen in bulk catalyst to contribute to reactions.