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  1. Catalysis plays a significant role in most processes of the chemical industry, especially in the emerging areas of sustainable energy and clean environment. A major challenge is the design of catalysts with the desired synergies in terms of activity, selectivity, stability, and cost. New insights into many fundamental questions related to the challenge have sparked a surge of interest in recent years in the area of exploring copper-based alloy catalysts. In this review, the most recent progress in the explorations of copper-alloy catalysts will be highlighted, with a focus on the structural and mechanistic characterizations of the catalysts in different catalytic reactions. The fundamental understanding of the detailed catalytic synergies of the catalysts for the targeted heterogeneous catalytic reactions depends strongly on the utilization of various analytical techniques for the characterization. Significant progress has been made in utilizing advanced techniques, both ex situ and in situ / operando characterizations, demonstrating the abilities to gain atomic/molecular level insights into the morphological, structural, electronic and catalytic properties of copper alloy catalysts, especially the dynamic surface active sites under the reaction conditions or during the catalytic processes. The focus on structural characterization in this review serves as a forum for discussions on structural and mechanistic details, which should provide useful information for identifying challenges and opportunities in future research and development of copper-alloy catalysts. 
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  2. Intermolecular interactions play a critical role in the binding strength of molecular assemblies on surfaces. The ability to harness them enables molecularly-tunable interfacial structures and properties. Herein we report the tuning of the intermolecular interactions in monolayer assemblies derived from organothiols of different structures for the creation of nanoelectrode arrays or ensembles with effective mass transport by a molecular-level perforation strategy. The homo- and hetero-intermolecular interactions can be fully controlled, which is demonstrated not only by thermodynamic analysis of the fractional coverage but also by surface infrared reflection absorption and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic characterizations. This understanding enables controllable electrochemical perforation for the creation of ensembles or arrays of channels across the monolayer thickness with molecular and nanoscale dimensions. Redox reactions on the nanoelectrode array display molecular tunability with a radial diffusion characteristic in good agreement with theoretical simulation results. These findings have implications for designing membrane-type ion-gating, electrochemical sensing, and electrochemical energy storage devices with molecular level tunability. 
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