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1.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 128(12): 4969-4977, 2024 Mar 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38567375

RESUMO

Electrolyte species can significantly influence the electrocatalytic performance. In this work, we investigate the impact of alkali metal cations on the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) on active Pt5Gd and Pt5Y polycrystalline electrodes. Due to the strain effects, Pt alloys exhibit a higher kinetic current density of ORR than pure Pt electrodes in acidic media. In alkaline solutions, the kinetic current density of ORR for Pt alloys decreases linearly with the decreasing hydration energy in the order of Li+ > Na+ > K+ > Rb+ > Cs+, whereas Pt shows the opposite trend. To gain further insights into these experimental results, we conduct complementary density functional theory calculations considering the effects of both electrode surface strain and electrolyte chemistry. The computational results reveal that the different trends in the ORR activity in alkaline media can be explained by the change in the adsorption energy of reaction intermediates with applied surface strain in the presence of alkali metal cations. Our findings provide important insights into the effects of the electrolyte and the strain conditions on the electrocatalytic performance and thus offer valuable guidelines for optimizing Pt-based electrocatalysts.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(14): 17814-17824, 2023 Apr 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36975208

RESUMO

Electrocatalysts encapsulated by an ultrathin and semipermeable oxide layer offer a promising avenue for efficient, selective, and cost-effective production of hydrogen through photoelectrochemical water splitting. This architecture is especially attractive for Z-scheme water splitting, for which a nanoporous oxide film can be leveraged to mitigate undesired, yet kinetically facile, reactions involving redox shuttles, such as aqueous iron cations, by limiting transport of these species to catalytically active sites. In this work, molecular dynamics simulations were combined with electrochemical measurements to provide a mechanistic understanding of permeation of water and Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox shuttles through nanoporous SiO2 films. It is shown that even for SiO2 pores with a width as small as 0.8 nm, water does not experience any energy barrier for permeating into the pores due to a favorable interaction with hydrophilic silanol groups on the oxide surface. In contrast, permeation of Fe(III) and Fe(II) into microporous SiO2 pores is limited due to high energy barriers, which stem from a combination of distortion and dehydration of the second and third ion solvation shells. Our simulations and experimental results show that SiO2 coatings can effectively mitigate undesired Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox reactions at underlying electrodes by attenuating permeation of iron cations, while allowing water to permeate and thus participate in water splitting reactions. In a broader context, our study demonstrates that selectivity of solvated cations can be manipulated by controlling the pore size and surface chemistry of oxide films.

3.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 823, 2023 Feb 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36788213

RESUMO

Nitrate is a ubiquitous aqueous pollutant from agricultural and industrial activities. At the same time, conversion of nitrate to ammonia provides an attractive solution for the coupled environmental and energy challenge underlying the nitrogen cycle, by valorizing a pollutant to a carbon-free energy carrier and essential chemical feedstock. Mass transport limitations are a key obstacle to the efficient conversion of nitrate to ammonia from water streams, due to the dilute concentration of nitrate. Here, we develop bifunctional electrodes that couple a nitrate-selective redox-electrosorbent (polyaniline) with an electrocatalyst (cobalt oxide) for nitrate to ammonium conversion. We demonstrate the synergistic reactive separation of nitrate through solely electrochemical control. Electrochemically-reversible nitrate uptake greater than 70 mg/g can be achieved, with electronic structure calculations and spectroscopic measurements providing insight into the underlying role of hydrogen bonding for nitrate selectivity. Using agricultural tile drainage water containing dilute nitrate (0.27 mM), we demonstrate that the bifunctional electrode can achieve a 8-fold up-concentration of nitrate, a 24-fold enhancement of ammonium production rate (108.1 ug h-1 cm-2), and a >10-fold enhancement in energy efficiency when compared to direct electrocatalysis in the dilute stream. Our study provides a generalized strategy for a fully electrified reaction-separation pathway for modular nitrate remediation and ammonia production.

4.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 13(13): 3047-3052, 2022 Apr 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35352928

RESUMO

Cathodic corrosion of metals discovered more than 120 years ago remains a poorly understood electrochemical process. It is believed that the corrosion intermediates formed during cathodic polarization are extremely short-lived species because of their high reactivity. Together with the concurrent vigorous hydrogen evolution, this makes it challenging to investigate the reaction mechanism and detect the intermediates experimentally. From a computational standpoint, the process also presents a serious challenge as it occurs at rather low negative potentials in concentrated alkaline solutions. Here, we use density-functional-theory calculations to elucidate the identity of reaction intermediates and their reactivity at the Pt(111)/electrolyte interface. By controlling the electrode potential in an experimentally relevant region through constant Fermi-level molecular dynamics, we reveal the formation of alkali cation-stabilized Pt hydrides as intermediates of cathodic corrosion. The results also suggest that the found Pt anions could discharge at the interface to produce H2 by reacting with either surface-bound hydrogen species or solution water molecules.

5.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(24): 13343-13349, 2021 Jun 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33687762

RESUMO

Extensive research efforts are currently dedicated to the search for new electrocatalyst materials in which expensive and rare noble metals are replaced with cheaper and more abundant transition metals. Recently, numerous alloys, oxides, and composites with such metals have been identified as highly active electrocatalysts through the use of high-throughput screening methods with the help of activity descriptors. Up to this point, stability has lacked such descriptors. Hence, we elucidate the role of intrinsic metal/oxide properties on the corrosion behavior of representative 3d, 4d, and 5d transition metals. Electrochemical dissolution of nine transition metals is quantified using online inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Based on the obtained dissolution data in alkaline and acidic media, we establish clear periodic correlations between the amount of dissolved metal, the cohesive energy of the metal atoms (Ecoh ), and the energy of oxygen adsorption on the metal (ΔHO,ads ). Such correlations can support the knowledge-driven search for more stable electrocatalysts.

6.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(7): 2695-2700, 2020 Apr 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32188249

RESUMO

Understanding the mechanistic interplay between the activity and stability of water splitting electrocatalysts is crucial for developing efficient and durable water electrolyzers. Ir-based materials are among the best catalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in acidic media, but their degradation mechanisms are not completely understood. Here, through first-principles calculations we investigate iridium dissolution at the IrO2(110)/water interface. Simulations reveal that the surface-bound IrO2OH species formed upon iridium dissolution should be thermodynamically stable in a relatively wide potential window undergoing transformations into IrVI (as IrO3) at high anodic potentials and IrIII (as Ir(OH)3) at low anodic potentials. The identified high-valence surface-bound dissolution intermediates of Ir are determined to display greater OER activities than the pristine IrO2(110) surface in agreement with the experimentally observed high activity of an amorphous hydrated IrOx surface layer. Combined with recent experimental results, our simulations illuminate the mechanistic details of the degradation mechanism of IrO2 and how it couples to electrocatalytic OER.

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