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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(21): 15068-15089, 2024 May 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38752774

RESUMEN

This contribution provides a comprehensive guide for evaluating the one-dimensional impedance response of dense mixed ionic and electronic conductors based on a physically derived transmission line model. While mass and charge transport through the bulk of a mixed conductor is always described by three fundamental parameters (chemical capacitance, ionic conductivity and electronic conductivity), it is the nature of the contact interfaces that largely determines the observed impedance response. Thus, to allow an intuitive adaptation of the transmission line model for any specific measurement situation, the physical meanings of terminal impedance elements at the ionic and electronic rail ends are explicitly discussed. By distinguishing between charge transfer terminals and electrochemical reaction terminals, the range of possible measurement configurations is categorized into symmetrical, SOFC-type and battery-type setups, all of which are explored on the basis of practical examples from the literature. Also, the transformation of an SOFC electrode into a battery electrode and the relevance of side reactions for the impedance of battery electrodes is discussed.

2.
Langmuir ; 38(48): 14988-15000, 2022 Dec 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36426749

RESUMEN

Extremely robust cohesion triggered by calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H) precipitation during cement hardening makes concrete one of the most commonly used man-made materials. Here, in this proof-of-concept study, we seek an additional nanoscale understanding of early-stage cohesive forces acting between hydrating model tricalcium silicate (C3S) surfaces by combining rheological and surface force measurements. We first used time-resolved small oscillatory rheology measurements (SAOSs) to characterize the early-stage evolution of the cohesive properties of a C3S paste and a C-S-H gel. SAOS revealed the reactive and viscoelastic nature of C3S pastes, in contrast with the nonreactive but still viscoelastic nature of the C-S-H gel, which proves a temporal variation in the cohesion during microstructural physicochemical rearrangements in the C3S paste. We further prepared thin films of C3S by plasma laser deposition (PLD) and demonstrated that these films are suitable for force measurements in the surface force apparatus (SFA). We measured surface forces acting between two thin C3S films exposed to water and subsequent in situ calcium silicate hydrate precipitation. With the SFA and SFA-coupled interferometric measurements, we resolved that C3S surface reprecipitation in water was associated with both increasing film thickness and progressively stronger adhesion (pull-off force). The lasting adhesion developing between the growing surfaces depended on the applied load, pull-off rate, and time in contact. These properties indicated the viscoelastic character of the soft, gel-like reprecipitated layer, pointing to the formation of C-S-H. Our findings confirm the strong cohesive properties of hydrated calcium silicate surfaces that, based on our preliminary SFA measurements, are attributed to sharp changes in the surface microstructure. In contact with water, the brittle and rough C3S surfaces with little contact area weather into soft, gel-like C-S-H nanoparticles with a much larger surface area available for forming direct contacts between interacting surfaces.

3.
Chem Soc Rev ; 49(2): 554-592, 2020 Jan 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31872840

RESUMEN

Ceria and its solid solutions play a vital role in several industrial processes and devices. These include solar energy-to-fuel conversion, solid oxide fuel and electrolyzer cells, memristors, chemical looping combustion, automotive 3-way catalysts, catalytic surface coatings, supercapacitors and recently, electrostrictive devices. An attractive feature of ceria is the possibility of tuning defect-chemistry to increase the effectiveness of the materials in application areas. Years of study have revealed many features of the long-range, macroscopic characteristics of ceria and its derivatives. In this review we focus on an area of ceria defect chemistry which has received comparatively little attention - defect-induced local distortions and short-range associates. These features are non-periodic in nature and hence not readily detected by conventional X-ray powder diffraction. We compile the relevant literature data obtained by thermodynamic analysis, Raman spectroscopy, and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy. Each of these techniques provides insight into material behavior without reliance on long-range periodic symmetry. From thermodynamic analyses, association of defects is inferred. From XAFS, an element-specific probe, local structure around selected atomic species is obtained, whereas from Raman spectroscopy, local symmetry breaking and vibrational changes in bonding patterns is detected. We note that, for undoped ceria and its solid solutions, the relationship between short range order and cation-oxygen-vacancy coordination remains a subject of active debate. Beyond collating the sometimes contradictory data in the literature, we strengthen this review by reporting new spectroscopy results and analysis. We contribute to this debate by introducing additional data and analysis, with the expectation that increasing our fundamental understanding of this relationship will lead to an ability to predict and tailor the defect-chemistry of ceria-based materials for practical applications.

4.
Nat Mater ; 16(6): 640-645, 2017 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28346431

RESUMEN

Improvement of solid oxide fuel cells strongly relies on the development of cathode materials with high catalytic activity for the oxygen reduction reaction. Excellent activity was found for perovskite-type oxides such as La1-xSrxCoO3-δ (LSC), but performance degradation, probably caused by surface composition changes, hinders exploitation of the full potential of LSC. This study reveals that the potentially very high activity of the LSC surface can be traced back to few very active sites. Already tiny amounts of SrO, for example, 4% of a monolayer, deposited on an LSC surface, lead to severe deactivation. Co, on the other hand, causes (re-)activation, suggesting that active sites are strongly related to Co being present at the surface. These insights could be gained by a novel method to measure changes of the electrochemical performance of thin film electrodes in situ, while modifying their surface: impedance spectroscopy measurements during deposition of well-defined fractions of monolayers of Sr-, Co- and La-oxides by single laser pulses in a pulsed laser deposition chamber.

5.
Acta Chim Slov ; 63(3): 509-18, 2016.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27640378

RESUMEN

The oxygen stoichiometry of mixed conducting oxides depends on the oxygen chemical potential and thus on the oxygen partial pressure in the gas phase. Also voltages may change the local oxygen stoichiometry and the amount to which such changes take place is quantified by the chemical capacitance of the sample. Impedance spectroscopy can be used to probe this chemical capacitance. Impedance measurements on different oxides ((La,Sr)FeO3-δ = LSF, Sr(Ti,Fe)O3-δ = STF, and Pb(Zr,Ti)O3 = PZT) are presented, and demonstrate how the chemical capacitance may affect impedance spectra in different types of electrochemical cells. A quantitative analysis of the spectra is based on generalized equivalent circuits developed for mixed conducting oxides by J. Jamnik and J. Maier. It is discussed how defect chemical information can be deduced from the chemical capacitance.

6.
Solid State Ion ; 273: 25-29, 2015 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27570332

RESUMEN

Thermally and electrochemically driven 18O tracer exchange experiments in H2/H218O atmosphere were performed on SrTi0.7Fe0.3O3 - Î´ and Ce0.8Gd0.2O2 - Î´ thin films on single crystalline YSZ substrates. Noble metal current collectors were deposited on both films and electrochemically polarized during the exchange experiment. The resulting tracer distribution was analyzed by spatially resolved secondary ion mass spectrometry. Increased tracer fraction near the current collectors was found under cathodic polarization and decreased tracer fraction under anodic polarization. High cathodic bias leads to enhanced n-type electronic conductivity, which increases the extent of the electrochemically active zone.

7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 54(9): 2628-32, 2015 Feb 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25557533

RESUMEN

In the search for optimized cathode materials for high-temperature electrolysis, mixed conducting oxides are highly promising candidates. This study deals with fundamentally novel insights into the relation between surface chemistry and electrocatalytic activity of lanthanum ferrite based electrolysis cathodes. For this means, near-ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS) and impedance spectroscopy experiments were performed simultaneously on electrochemically polarized La0.6 Sr0.4 FeO3-δ (LSF) thin film electrodes. Under cathodic polarization the formation of Fe(0) on the LSF surface could be observed, which was accompanied by a strong improvement of the electrochemical water splitting activity of the electrodes. This correlation suggests a fundamentally different water splitting mechanism in presence of the metallic iron species and may open novel paths in the search for electrodes with increased water splitting activity.


Asunto(s)
Compuestos de Calcio/química , Técnicas Electroquímicas , Hierro/química , Óxidos/química , Titanio/química , Agua/química , Electrodos , Cinética , Lantano/química , Espectroscopía de Fotoelectrones , Estroncio/química , Propiedades de Superficie
8.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 1730, 2024 Feb 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38409206

RESUMEN

Improving materials for energy conversion and storage devices is deeply connected with an optimization of their surfaces and surface modification is a promising strategy on the way to enhance modern energy technologies. This study shows that surface modification with ultra-thin oxide layers allows for a systematic tailoring of the surface dipole and the work function of mixed ionic and electronic conducting oxides, and it introduces the ionic potential of surface cations as a readily accessible descriptor for these effects. The combination of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and density functional theory (DFT) illustrates that basic oxides with a lower ionic potential than the host material induce a positive surface charge and reduce the work function of the host material and vice versa. As a proof of concept that this strategy is widely applicable to tailor surface properties, we examined the effect of ultra-thin decoration layers on the oxygen exchange kinetics of pristine mixed conducting oxide thin films in very clean conditions by means of in-situ impedance spectroscopy during pulsed laser deposition (i-PLD). The study shows that basic decorations with a reduced surface work function lead to a substantial acceleration of the oxygen exchange on the surfaces of diverse materials.

9.
EES Catal ; 1(3): 274-289, 2023 May 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37213935

RESUMEN

A new type of catalyst preparation yields its active sites not by infiltration but exsolution of reducible transition metals of its own host lattice. These exsolution catalysts offer a high dispersion of catalytically active particles, slow agglomeration, and the possibility of reactivation after poisoning due to redox cycling. The formation of exsolved particles by partial decomposition of the host lattice can be driven by applying a sufficiently reducing atmosphere, elevated temperatures but also by a cathodic bias voltage (provided the host perovskite is an electrode on an oxide ion conducting electrolyte). In addition, such an electrochemical polarisation can change the oxidation state and thus the catalytic activity of exsolved particles. In this work, we investigate the electrochemical switching between an active and an inactive state of iron particles exsolved from thin film mixed conducting model electrodes, namely La0.6Sr0.4FeO3-δ (LSF) and Nd0.6Ca0.4FeO3-δ (NCF), in humid hydrogen atmospheres. We show that the transition between two activity states exhibits a hysteresis-like behaviour in the electrochemical I-V characteristics. Ambient pressure XPS measurements proofed that this hysteresis is linked to the oxidation and reduction of iron particles. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that the surface kinetics of the host material itself has only a negligible impact on the particle exsolution, and that the main impact factors are the surrounding atmosphere as well as the applied electrochemical overpotential. In particular, we suggest a 'kinetic competition' between gas atmosphere and oxygen chemical potential in the mixed conducting electrode and discuss possible ways of how this process takes place.

10.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(6): 8076-8092, 2023 Feb 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36729502

RESUMEN

Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy was used to investigate the chemical capacitance of La0.6Sr0.4CoO3-δ (LSC) thin-film electrodes under anodic polarization (i.e., in the electrolysis mode). For this purpose, electrodes with different microstructures were prepared via pulsed-laser deposition. Analysis of dense electrodes and electrodes with open porosity revealed decreasing chemical capacitances with increasing anodic overpotentials, as expected from defect chemical considerations. However, extremely high chemical capacitance peaks with values in the range of 104 F/cm3 at overpotentials of >140 mV were obtained after annealing for several hours in synthetic air and/or after applying high anodic bias voltages of >750 mV. From the results of several surface analysis techniques and transmission electron microscopy, it is concluded that closed pores develop upon both of these treatments: (i) During annealing, initially open pores get closed by SrSO4, which forms due to strontium segregation in measurement gases with minute traces of sulfur. (ii) The bias treatment causes mechanical failure and morphological changes including closed pores in the bulk of dense films. Under anodic polarization, high-pressure oxygen accumulates in those closed pores, and this causes the capacitance peak. Model calculations based on a real-gas equation allow us to properly predict the experimentally obtained capacitance increase. We demonstrate that analysis of the chemical capacitance of oxygen electrodes in solid oxide electrolysis cells can thus be used as a nondestructive observation tool to detect and quantify closed porosity with a lower detection limit between 10-4 and 10-3.

11.
ACS Appl Energy Mater ; 6(12): 6712-6720, 2023 Jun 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37388294

RESUMEN

The oxygen exchange kinetics and the surface chemistry of epitaxially grown, dense La0.6Sr0.4CoO3-δ (LSC) thin films in three different orientations, (001), (110), and (111), were investigated by means of in situ impedance spectroscopy during pulsed laser deposition (i-PLD) and near-ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS). i-PLD measurements showed that pristine LSC surfaces exhibit very fast surface exchange kinetics but revealed no significant differences between the specific orientations. However, as soon as the surfaces were in contact with acidic, gaseous impurities, such as S-containing compounds in nominally pure measurement atmospheres, NAP-XPS measurements revealed that the (001) orientation is substantially more susceptible to the formation of sulfate adsorbates and a concomitant performance decrease. This result is further substantiated by a stronger increase of the work function on (001)-oriented LSC surfaces upon sulfate adsorbate formation and by a faster performance degradation of these surfaces in ex situ measurement setups. This phenomenon has potentially gone unnoticed in the discussion of the interplay between the crystal orientation and the oxygen exchange kinetics and might have far-reaching implications for real solid oxide cell electrodes, where porous materials exhibit a wide variety of differently oriented and reconstructed surfaces.

12.
J Mater Chem A Mater ; 11(24): 12827-12836, 2023 Jun 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37346740

RESUMEN

Minimizing the overpotential at the air electrode of solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC) is one of the key challenges regarding a broad applicability of this technology. Next to novel materials and geometry optimization, surface modification is a promising and flexible method to alter the oxygen exchange kinetics at SOFC cathode surfaces. Despite extensive research, the mechanism behind the effect of surface decorations is still under debate. Moreover, for Sr decoration, previous studies yielded conflicting results, reporting either a beneficial or a detrimental impact on the oxygen exchange kinetics. In this contribution, in situ impedance spectroscopy during pulsed laser deposition was used to investigate the effect of Sr containing decorations under different deposition conditions. Depending on deposition temperature and interactions with the gas phase, opposing effects of Sr decoration were found. In combination with near-ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and non-ambient X-ray diffractometry, it was possible to trace this phenomenon back to different chemical environments of the surface Sr. At high temperatures, Sr is deposited as SrO, which can have a beneficial effect on the oxygen exchange kinetics. At low temperatures, SrCO3 adsorbates are formed from trace amounts of CO2 in the measurement atmosphere, causing a decrease of the oxygen exchange rate. These results are in excellent agreement with the concept of surface acidity as a descriptor for the effect of surface decorations, providing further insight into the oxygen exchange kinetics on SOFC cathode surfaces and its degradation. In addition, this study shows that Sr segregation itself initially does not lead to performance degradation but that segregated SrO readily reacts with acidic compounds, reducing the catalytic capability of mixed conducting oxides.

13.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(22): 26787-26798, 2023 Jun 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37212575

RESUMEN

The oxygen exchange kinetics of epitaxial Pr0.1Ce0.9O2-δ electrodes was modified by decoration with submonolayer amounts of different basic (SrO, CaO) and acidic (SnO2, TiO2) binary oxides. The oxygen exchange reaction (OER) rate and the total conductivity were measured by in situ PLD impedance spectroscopy (i-PLD), which allows to directly track changes of electrochemical properties after each deposited pulse of surface decoration. The surface chemistry of the electrodes was investigated by near-ambient pressure XPS measurements (NAP-XPS) at elevated temperatures and by low-energy ion scattering (LEIS). While a significant alteration of the OER rate was observed after decoration with binary oxides, the pO2 dependence of the surface exchange resistance and its activation energy were not affected, suggesting that surface decorations do not alter the fundamental OER mechanism. Furthermore, the total conductivity of the thin films does not change upon decoration, indicating that defect concentration changes are limited to the surface layer. This is confirmed by NAP-XPS measurements which find only minor changes of the Pr-oxidation state upon decoration. NAP-XPS was further employed to investigate changes of the surface potential step on decorated surfaces. From a mechanistic point of view, our results indicate a correlation between the surface potential and the altered oxygen exchange activity. Oxidic decorations induce a surface charge which depends on their acidity (acidic oxides lead to a negative surface charge), affecting surface defect concentrations, any existing surface potential step, potentially adsorption dynamics, and consequently also the OER kinetics.

14.
J Mater Chem A Mater ; 11(13): 7213-7226, 2023 Mar 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37007913

RESUMEN

The effects of sulphur adsorbates and other typical solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) poisons on the electronic and ionic properties of an SrO-terminated (La,Sr)CoO3 (LSC) surface and on its oxygen exchange kinetics have been investigated experimentally with near ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (NAP-XPS), low energy ion scattering (LEIS) and impedance spectroscopy as well as computationally with density functional theory (DFT). The experiment shows that trace amounts of sulphur in measurement atmospheres form SO2- 4 adsorbates and strongly deactivate a pristine LSC surface. They induce a work function increase, indicating a changing surface potential and a surface dipole. DFT calculations reveal that the main participants in these charge transfer processes are not sub-surface transition metals, but surface oxygen atoms. The study further shows that sulphate adsorbates strongly affect oxygen vacancy formation energies in the LSC (sub-)surface, thus affecting defect concentrations and oxygen transport properties. To generalize these results, the investigation was extended to other acidic oxides which are technologically relevant as SOFC cathode poisons, such as CO2 and CrO3. The results unveil a clear correlation of work function changes and redistributed charge with the Smith acidity of the adsorbed oxide and clarify fundamental mechanistic details of atomic surface modifications. The impact of acidic adsorbates on various aspects of the oxygen exchange reaction rate is discussed in detail.

15.
J Mater Chem A Mater ; 10(6): 2973-2986, 2022 Feb 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35223041

RESUMEN

Accelerating the oxygen reduction kinetics of solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) cathodes is crucial to improve their efficiency and thus to provide the basis for an economically feasible application of intermediate temperature SOFCs. In this work, minor amounts of Pt were doped into lanthanum strontium ferrite (LSF) thin film electrodes to modulate the material's oxygen exchange performance. Surprisingly, Pt was found to be incorporated on the B-site of the perovskite electrode as non metallic Pt4+. The polarization resistance of LSF thin film electrodes with and without additional Pt surface doping was compared directly after film growth employing in situ electrochemical impedance spectroscopy inside a PLD chamber (i-PLD). This technique enables observation of the polarization resistance of pristine electrodes unaltered by degradation or any external contamination of the electrode surface. Moreover, growth of multi-layers of materials with different compositions on the very same single crystalline electrolyte substrate combined with in situ impedance measurements allow excellent comparability of different materials. Even a 5 nm layer of Pt doped LSF (1.5 at% Pt), i.e. a Pt loading of 80 ng cm-2, improved the polarization resistance by a factor of about 2.5. In addition, p(O2) and temperature dependent impedance measurements on both pure and Pt doped LSF were performed in situ and obtained similar activation energies and p(O2) dependence of the polarization resistance, which allow us to make far reaching mechanistic conclusions indicating that Pt4+ introduces additional active sites.

16.
J Mater Chem A Mater ; 10(28): 14838-14848, 2022 Jul 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35923869

RESUMEN

In this study, five different mixed conducting cathode materials were grown as dense thin films by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) and characterized via in situ impedance spectroscopy directly after growth inside the PLD chamber (i-PLD). This technique enables quantification of the oxygen reduction kinetics on pristine and contaminant-free mixed conducting surfaces. The measurements reveal excellent catalytic performance of all pristine materials with polarization resistances being up to two orders of magnitude lower than those previously reported in the literature. For instance, on dense La0.6Sr0.4CoO3-δ thin films, an area specific surface resistance of ∼0.2 Ω cm2 at 600 °C in synthetic air was found, while values usually >1 Ω cm2 are measured in conventional ex situ measurement setups. While surfaces after i-PLD measurements were very clean, ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (AP-XPS) measurements found that all samples measured in other setups were contaminated with sulfate adsorbates. In situ impedance spectroscopy during AP-XPS revealed that already trace amounts of sulfur present in high purity gases accumulate quickly on pristine surfaces and lead to strongly increased surface polarization resistances, even before the formation of a SrSO4 secondary phase. Accordingly, the inherent excellent catalytic properties of this important class of materials were often inaccessible so far. As a proof of concept, the fast kinetics observed on sulfate-free surfaces were also realized in ex situ measurements with a gas purification setup and further reduces the sulfur concentration in the high purity gas.

17.
J Mater Chem A Mater ; 9(27): 15226-15237, 2021 Jul 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34354833

RESUMEN

Cubic Li7La3Zr2O12 (LLZO) garnets are among the most promising solid electrolytes for solid-state batteries with the potential to exceed conventional battery concepts in terms of energy density and safety. The electrochemical stability of LLZO is crucial for its application, however, controversial reports in the literature show that it is still an unsettled matter. Here, we investigate the electrochemical stability of LLZO single crystals by applying electric field stress via macro- and microscopic ionically blocking Au electrodes in ambient air. Induced material changes are subsequently probed using various locally resolved analysis techniques, including microelectrode electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), laser induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS), laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), and microfocus X-ray diffraction (XRD). Our experiments indicate that LLZO decomposes at 4.1-4.3 V vs. Li+/Li, leading to the formation of Li-poor phases like La2Zr2O7 beneath the positively polarized electrode. The reaction is still on-going even after several days of polarization, indicating that no blocking interfacial layer is formed. The decomposition can be observed at elevated as well as room temperature and suggests that LLZO is truly not compatible with high voltage cathode materials.

18.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 91(8): 084104, 2020 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32872960

RESUMEN

This work shows a combined setup of Diffuse Reflectance FT-IR Spectroscopy (DRIFTS) and electrochemical characterization by AC and DC methods for in situ and operando investigations of surface species during CO2 electrolysis on metal oxide electrodes and their correlation with electrochemical activity. A high-temperature reaction chamber enables conducting DRIFTS and electrochemical experiments simultaneously at temperatures up to 1000 °C in both reductive and oxidative reaction atmospheres and under anodic and cathodic polarization conditions. A dedicated gas- and electrical feedthrough solution is presented, which is the key element required for recording electrochemical AC and DC characteristics using an electrochemical cell, which is simultaneously studied by DRIFTS experiments under realistic operation conditions. Selected results, obtained on a gadolinium doped ceria model solid oxide electrolysis cell upon different polarization states, demonstrate the basic functionality and capabilities of the setup and show how the simultaneous DRIFT-spectroscopic and electrochemical investigation of the surface and bulk chemistry on electrode materials leads to increased insight in the population of potential intermediates during CO2 electrolysis. With infrared spectroscopy and impedance spectroscopy as common and complementary spectroscopic methods in material science, the setup is considered to exhibit a huge potential in a wide field of fundamental and applied mechanistic research.

19.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 4801, 2020 Sep 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32968079

RESUMEN

Exsolution of metal nanoparticles from perovskite-type oxides is a very promising approach to obtain catalysts with superior properties. One particularly interesting property of exsolution catalysts is the possibility of electrochemical switching between different activity states. In this work, synchrotron-based in-situ X-ray diffraction experiments on electrochemically polarized La0.6Sr0.4FeO3-δ thin film electrodes are performed, in order to simultaneously obtain insights into the phase composition and the catalytic activity of the electrode surface. This shows that reversible electrochemical switching between a high and low activity state is accompanied by a phase change of exsolved particles between metallic α--Fe and Fe-oxides. Reintegration of iron into the perovskite lattice is thus not required for obtaining a switchable catalyst, making this process especially interesting for intermediate temperature applications. These measurements also reveal how metallic particles on La0.6Sr0.4FeO3-δ electrodes affect the H2 oxidation and H2O splitting mechanism and why the particle size plays a minor role.

20.
Acta Crystallogr B Struct Sci Cryst Eng Mater ; 76(Pt 6): 1055-1070, 2020 Dec 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33289717

RESUMEN

Perovskite-type oxide materials (nominal composition ABO3) are a very versatile class of materials, and their properties are tuneable by varying and doping A- and B-site cations. When the B-site contains easily reducible cations (e.g. Fe, Co or Ni), these can exsolve under reducing conditions and form metallic nanoparticles on the surface. This process is very interesting as a novel route for the preparation of catalysts, since oxide surfaces decorated with finely dispersed catalytically active (often metallic) nanoparticles are a key requirement for excellent catalyst performance. Five doped perovskites, namely, La0.9Ca0.1FeO3-δ, La0.6Ca0.4FeO3-δ, Nd0.9Ca0.1FeO3-δ, Nd0.6Ca0.4FeO3-δ and Nd0.6Ca0.4Fe0.9Co0.1O3-δ, have been synthesized and characterized by experimental and theoretical methods with respect to their crystal structures, electronic properties, morphology and exsolution behaviour. All are capable of exsolving Fe and/or Co. Special emphasis has been placed on the influence of the A-site elemental composition on structure and exsolution capability. Using Nd instead of La increased structural distortions and, at the same time, hindered exsolution. Increasing the amount of Ca doping also increased distortions and additionally changed the Fe oxidation states, resulting in exsolution being shifted to higher temperatures as well. Using the easily reducible element Co as the B-site dopant significantly facilitated the exsolution process and led to much smaller and homogeneously distributed exsolved particles. Therefore, the Co-doped perovskite is a promising material for applications in catalysis, even more so as Co is catalytically a highly active element. The results show that fine-tuning of the perovskite composition will allow tailored exsolution of nanoparticles, which can be used for highly sophisticated catalyst design.

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