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When a good nanoparticle goes bad

11.10.08 | U.S. National Science Foundation

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Researchers at Cornell University recently made a major breakthrough when they invented a method to test and demonstrate a long-held hypothesis that some very, very small metal particles work much better than others in various chemical processes such as converting chemical energy to electricity in fuel cells or reducing automobile pollution.

The breakthrough, reported in this week's edition of the journal Nature Materials , also came with a surprise. By devising a way to watch individual molecules react with a single nanoscale particle of gold in real time, researchers confirmed that some gold particles are better at increasing the rate of a chemical reaction than others, but they also found that a good catalyst sometimes spontaneously turns bad.

Understanding why these particles change and how to stabilize the "good" particles may lead to solutions for a wide range of problems such as the current global energy challenge.

NSF-PR 08-200

Nature Materials

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Contact Information

Bobbie Mixon
bmixon@nsf.gov

How to Cite This Article

APA:
U.S. National Science Foundation. (2008, November 10). When a good nanoparticle goes bad. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LD5G53XL/when-a-good-nanoparticle-goes-bad.html
MLA:
"When a good nanoparticle goes bad." Brightsurf News, Nov. 10 2008, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LD5G53XL/when-a-good-nanoparticle-goes-bad.html.