Literature DB >> 33208960

Key role of chemistry versus bias in electrocatalytic oxygen evolution.

Hong Nhan Nong1,2, Lorenz J Falling3, Arno Bergmann4, Malte Klingenhof1, Hoang Phi Tran1, Camillo Spöri1, Rik Mom3, Janis Timoshenko4, Guido Zichittella5, Axel Knop-Gericke2,3, Simone Piccinin6, Javier Pérez-Ramírez5, Beatriz Roldan Cuenya4, Robert Schlögl2,3, Peter Strasser1, Detre Teschner7,8, Travis E Jones9.   

Abstract

The oxygen evolution reaction has an important role in many alternative-energy schemes because it supplies the protons and electrons required for converting renewable electricity into chemical fuels1-3. Electrocatalysts accelerate the reaction by facilitating the required electron transfer4, as well as the formation and rupture of chemical bonds5. This involvement in fundamentally different processes results in complex electrochemical kinetics that can be challenging to understand and control, and that typically depends exponentially on overpotential1,2,6,7. Such behaviour emerges when the applied bias drives the reaction in line with the phenomenological Butler-Volmer theory, which focuses on electron transfer8, enabling the use of Tafel analysis to gain mechanistic insight under quasi-equilibrium9-11 or steady-state assumptions12. However, the charging of catalyst surfaces under bias also affects bond formation and rupture13-15, the effect of which on the electrocatalytic rate is not accounted for by the phenomenological Tafel analysis8 and is often unknown. Here we report pulse voltammetry and operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy measurements on iridium oxide to show that the applied bias does not act directly on the reaction coordinate, but affects the electrocatalytically generated current through charge accumulation in the catalyst. We find that the activation free energy decreases linearly with the amount of oxidative charge stored, and show that this relationship underlies electrocatalytic performance and can be evaluated using measurement and computation. We anticipate that these findings and our methodology will help to better understand other electrocatalytic materials and design systems with improved performance.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 33208960     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2908-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  22 in total

1.  The low overpotential regime of acidic water oxidation part I: the importance of O2 detection.

Authors:  Soren B Scott; Reshma R Rao; Choongman Moon; Jakob E Sørensen; Jakob Kibsgaard; Yang Shao-Horn; Ib Chorkendorff
Journal:  Energy Environ Sci       Date:  2022-03-19       Impact factor: 39.714

Review 2.  Oxygen Evolution Reaction in Energy Conversion and Storage: Design Strategies Under and Beyond the Energy Scaling Relationship.

Authors:  Jiangtian Li
Journal:  Nanomicro Lett       Date:  2022-04-28

3.  Role of Nanoscale Inhomogeneities in Co2FeO4 Catalysts during the Oxygen Evolution Reaction.

Authors:  Felix Thomas Haase; Anna Rabe; Franz-Philipp Schmidt; Antonia Herzog; Hyo Sang Jeon; Wiebke Frandsen; Praveen Vidusha Narangoda; Ioannis Spanos; Klaus Friedel Ortega; Janis Timoshenko; Thomas Lunkenbein; Malte Behrens; Arno Bergmann; Robert Schlögl; Beatriz Roldan Cuenya
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2022-06-29       Impact factor: 16.383

Review 4.  Implicit Solvation Methods for Catalysis at Electrified Interfaces.

Authors:  Stefan Ringe; Nicolas G Hörmann; Harald Oberhofer; Karsten Reuter
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2021-12-20       Impact factor: 72.087

5.  Chromium-Modified Ultrathin CoFe LDH as High-Efficiency Electrode for Hydrogen Evolution Reaction.

Authors:  Jun-Jun Zhang; Meng-Yang Li; Xiang Li; Wei-Wei Bao; Chang-Qing Jin; Xiao-Hua Feng; Ge Liu; Chun-Ming Yang; Nan-Nan Zhang
Journal:  Nanomaterials (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-06       Impact factor: 5.076

6.  Modulating Pt-O-Pt atomic clusters with isolated cobalt atoms for enhanced hydrogen evolution catalysis.

Authors:  Yufei Zhao; Priyank V Kumar; Xin Tan; Xinxin Lu; Xiaofeng Zhu; Junjie Jiang; Jian Pan; Shibo Xi; Hui Ying Yang; Zhipeng Ma; Tao Wan; Dewei Chu; Wenjie Jiang; Sean C Smith; Rose Amal; Zhaojun Han; Xunyu Lu
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-05-04       Impact factor: 17.694

7.  Intrinsic Electrocatalytic Activity for Oxygen Evolution of Crystalline 3d-Transition Metal Layered Double Hydroxides.

Authors:  Fabio Dionigi; Jing Zhu; Zhenhua Zeng; Thomas Merzdorf; Hannes Sarodnik; Manuel Gliech; Lujin Pan; Wei-Xue Li; Jeffrey Greeley; Peter Strasser
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2021-05-26       Impact factor: 16.823

8.  Spin pinning effect to reconstructed oxyhydroxide layer on ferromagnetic oxides for enhanced water oxidation.

Authors:  Tianze Wu; Xiao Ren; Yuanmiao Sun; Shengnan Sun; Guoyu Xian; Günther G Scherer; Adrian C Fisher; Daniel Mandler; Joel W Ager; Alexis Grimaud; Junling Wang; Chengmin Shen; Haitao Yang; Jose Gracia; Hong-Jun Gao; Zhichuan J Xu
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-06-15       Impact factor: 14.919

9.  Complex Impedance Analysis on Charge Accumulation Step of Mn3O4 Nanoparticles during Water Oxidation.

Authors:  Hongmin Seo; Sunghak Park; Kang Hee Cho; Seungwoo Choi; Changwan Ko; Hyacinthe Randriamahazaka; Ki Tae Nam
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2021-07-06

10.  Operando tracking of oxidation-state changes by coupling electrochemistry with time-resolved X-ray absorption spectroscopy demonstrated for water oxidation by a cobalt-based catalyst film.

Authors:  Chiara Pasquini; Si Liu; Petko Chernev; Diego Gonzalez-Flores; Mohammad Reza Mohammadi; Paul Kubella; Shan Jiang; Stefan Loos; Katharina Klingan; Vadim Sikolenko; Stefan Mebs; Michael Haumann; Paul Beyer; Luca D'Amario; Rodney D L Smith; Ivelina Zaharieva; Holger Dau
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2021-07-17       Impact factor: 4.142

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