Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 47
Filtrar
1.
Chem Rev ; 124(3): 629-721, 2024 Feb 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38253355

RESUMEN

Electrochemical and electrocatalytic processes are of key importance for the transition to a sustainable energy supply as well as for a wide variety of other technologically relevant fields. Further development of these processes requires in-depth understanding of the atomic, nano, and micro scale structure of the materials and interfaces in electrochemical devices under reaction conditions. We here provide a comprehensive review of in situ and operando studies by X-ray scattering methods, which are powerful and highly versatile tools to provide such understanding. We discuss the application of X-ray scattering to a wide variety of electrochemical systems, ranging from metal and oxide single crystals to nanoparticles and even full devices. We show how structural data on bulk phases, electrode-electrolyte interfaces, and nanoscale morphology can be obtained and describe recent developments that provide highly local information and insight into the composition and electronic structure. These X-ray scattering studies yield insights into the structure in the double layer potential range as well as into the structural evolution during electrocatalytic processes and phase formation reactions, such as nucleation and growth during electrodeposition and dissolution, the formation of passive films, corrosion processes, and the electrochemical intercalation into battery materials.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(36): 24871-24877, 2023 Sep 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37680172

RESUMEN

Ag-decorated Cu electrocatalysts are of great interest for electrochemical CO2 reduction, because of an increased yield of multi-carbon products. Here, we present studies of well-defined AgCu electrodes by in situ scanning tunneling microscopy. These bimetallic model electrocatalysts are prepared by electrodepositing submonolayer Ag coverages on Cu(100) in 0.1 M H2SO4, resulting in monolayer islands with a hexagonal quasi-Ag(111) atomic lattice. Upon exchanging the solution at potentials in the double layer range to 0.1 M KHCO3, pronounced Ag island restructuring towards anisotropic shapes, the nucleation and growth of new islands, and a strong reduction in surface mobility are observed. In addition, high-resolution images reveal a highly disordered molecular adlayer, contrary to the case of Ag-free Cu(100) electrodes. These observations can be explained by interactions of metal adatoms with adsorbed (bi)carbonate and show that Ag redispersion on Cu electrocatalysts may occur even in the absence of CO2 reduction.

3.
J Chem Phys ; 158(16)2023 Apr 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37093134

RESUMEN

In situ linear optical diffraction is a new method for studies of surface mass transport in electrochemical environments that is based on the equilibration of coverage gratings in an adlayer on the electrode surface. We, here, discuss the temporal evolution of the diffraction intensity on the basis of experimental data for sulfur adsorbates on Pt(111) electrodes in 0.1M H2SO4 and simulations of the time-dependent diffusion profiles. At low and medium sulfur coverage, the decay of the signal exhibits two time scales, which can be explained by the influence of coverage-dependent diffusion rates on the evolution of gratings with large coverage modulation. At high coverage, a further ultra-slow decay process or even a complete termination of the decay is observed, which we attribute to the presence of high-density, ordered, adlayer phases with low sulfur mobility. These results provide insight into the approaches required for extracting quantitative surface transport rates from linear optical diffraction measurements.

4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(34): e202304293, 2023 Aug 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37341165

RESUMEN

The degradation of Pt-containing oxygen reduction catalysts for fuel cell applications is strongly linked to the electrochemical surface oxidation and reduction of Pt. Here, we study the surface restructuring and Pt dissolution mechanisms during oxidation/reduction for the case of Pt(100) in 0.1 M HClO4 by combining operando high-energy surface X-ray diffraction, online mass spectrometry, and density functional theory. Our atomic-scale structural studies reveal that anodic dissolution, detected during oxidation, and cathodic dissolution, observed during the subsequent reduction, are linked to two different oxide phases. Anodic dissolution occurs predominantly during nucleation and growth of the first, stripe-like oxide. Cathodic dissolution is linked to a second, amorphous Pt oxide phase that resembles bulk PtO2 and starts to grow when the coverage of the stripe-like oxide saturates. In addition, we find the amount of surface restructuring after an oxidation/reduction cycle to be potential-independent after the stripe-like oxide has reached its saturation coverage.

5.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(46): e202211360, 2022 Nov 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36122295

RESUMEN

(Bi)carbonate adsorption on Cu(100) in 0.1 M KHCO3 has been studied by in situ scanning tunneling microscopy. Coexistence of different ordered adlayer phases with ( 2 ${\sqrt{2}}$ ×6 2 ${\sqrt{2}}$ )R45° and (4×4) unit cells was observed in the double layer potential regime. The adlayer is rather dynamic and undergoes a reversible order-disorder phase transition at 0 V vs. the reversible hydrogen electrode. Density functional calculations indicate that the adlayer consists of coadsorbed carbonate and water molecules and is strongly stabilized by liquid water in the adjacent electrolyte.

6.
Chemphyschem ; 22(24): 2497, 2021 12 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34750944

RESUMEN

This special collection on Interface Phenomena is dedicated to R. Jürgen Behm on the occasion of his retirement and 70th birthday. Jürgen Behm's research over the past 40 years has addressed a wide variety of interface processes in the fields of growth, corrosion, heterogeneous catalysis, electrocatalysis, and batteries.

7.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(8): 5020-5027, 2021 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33595568

RESUMEN

This Comment raises several questions concerning the surface structure concluded in the paper referenced in the title. Specifically, that paper ignores previous experiments and simulations which demonstrate for the same ionic liquids depth-decaying, multilayered surface-normal density profiles rather than the claimed molecular mono- or bi-layers. We demonstrate that the claimed structure does not reproduce the measured X-ray reflectivity, which probes directly the surface-normal density profile. The measured reflectivities are found, however, to be well-reproduced by a multilayered density model. These results, and previous experimental and simulation results, cast severe doubt on the validity of the surface structure claimed in the paper referenced in the title.

8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(6): E1100-E1107, 2018 02 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29358372

RESUMEN

Interfaces of room temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) are important for both applications and basic science and are therefore intensely studied. However, the evolution of their interface structure with the cation's alkyl chain length [Formula: see text] from Coulomb to van der Waals interaction domination has not yet been studied for even a single broad homologous RTIL series. We present here such a study of the liquid-air interface for [Formula: see text], using angstrom-resolution X-ray methods. For [Formula: see text], a typical "simple liquid" monotonic surface-normal electron density profile [Formula: see text] is obtained, like those of water and organic solvents. For [Formula: see text], increasingly more pronounced nanoscale self-segregation of the molecules' charged moieties and apolar chains yields surface layering with alternating regions of headgroups and chains. The layering decays into the bulk over a few, to a few tens, of nanometers. The layering periods and decay lengths, their linear [Formula: see text] dependence, and slopes are discussed within two models, one with partial-chain interdigitation and the other with liquid-like chains. No surface-parallel long-range order is found within the surface layer. For [Formula: see text], a different surface phase is observed above melting. Our results also impact general liquid-phase issues like supramolecular self-aggregation and bulk-surface structure relations.

9.
Langmuir ; 36(37): 10905-10915, 2020 Sep 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32905700

RESUMEN

Detailed in operando studies of electrochemically induced PbBrF deposition at the liquid mercury/liquid electrolyte interface are presented. The nucleation and growth were monitored using time-resolved X-ray diffraction and reflectivity combined with electrochemical measurements, revealing a complex potential-dependent behavior. PbBrF deposition commences at potentials above -0.7 V with the rapid formation of an ultrathin adlayer of one unit cell thickness, on top of which (001)-oriented three-dimensional crystallites are formed. Two potential regimes are identified. At low overpotentials, slow growth of a low surface density film of large crystals is observed. At high overpotentials, crossover to a potential-independent morphology occurs, consisting of a compact PbBrF deposit with a saturation thickness of 25 nm, which forms within a few minutes. This potential behavior can be rationalized by the increasing supersaturation near the interface, caused by the potential-dependent Pb2+ deamalgamation, which changes from a slow reaction-controlled process to a fast transport-controlled process in this range of overpotentials. In addition, growth on the liquid substrate is found to involve complex micromechanical effects, such as crystal reorientation and film breakup during dissolution.

10.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(15): 6182-6186, 2020 Apr 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31919982

RESUMEN

CO adlayers on Pt(111) electrode surfaces are an important electrochemical system and of great relevance to electrocatalysis. The potential-dependent structure and dynamics of these adlayers are complex and still controversial, especially in the CO pre-oxidation regime. We here employ in situ high-speed scanning tunneling microscopy for studying the surface phase behavior in CO-saturated 0.1 m H2 SO4 on the millisecond time scale. At potentials near the onset of CO pre-oxidation local fluctuations in the (2×2)-CO adlayer are observed, which increase towards more positive potentials. Above 0.20 V (vs. Ag/AgCl), this leads to an adlayer where COad apparently reside on every top site, but still exhibit a (2×2) superstructure modulation. We interpret this observation as a dynamic effect, caused by a small number of highly mobile point defects in the (2×2)-CO adlayer. As shown by density functional theory calculations, the CO lattice near such defects relaxes into a local (1×1) arrangement, which can rapidly propagate across the surface. This scenario, where a static (2×2) COad sublattice coexists with a highly dynamic sublattice of partially occupied top sites, explains the pronounced COad surface mobility during electrooxidation.

11.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(39): 17192-17196, 2020 Sep 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32524693

RESUMEN

Light-induced transitions between the trans and cis isomer of triazatriangulenium-based azobenzene derivatives on Au(111) surfaces were observed directly by scanning tunneling microscopy, allowing atomic-scale studies of the photoisomerization kinetics. Although the azobenzene units in these adlayers are free-standing and spaced at uniform distances of 1.26 nm, their photoswitching depends on the isomeric state of the surrounding molecules and, specifically, is accelerated by neighboring cis isomers. These collective effects are supported by ab initio calculations indicating that the electronic excitation preferably localizes on the n-π* state of trans isomers with neighboring cis azobenzenes.

12.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(49): 21904-21908, 2020 Dec 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32729209

RESUMEN

Establishing the atomic-scale structure of metal-oxide surfaces during electrochemical reactions is a key step to modeling this important class of electrocatalysts. Here, we demonstrate that the characteristic (√2×√2)R45° surface reconstruction formed on (001)-oriented magnetite single crystals is maintained after immersion in 0.1 M NaOH at 0.20 V vs. Ag/AgCl and we investigate its dependence on the electrode potential. We follow the evolution of the surface using in situ and operando surface X-ray diffraction from the onset of hydrogen evolution, to potentials deep in the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) regime. The reconstruction remains stable for hours between -0.20 and 0.60 V and, surprisingly, is still present at anodic current densities of up to 10 mA cm-2 and strongly affects the OER kinetics. We attribute this to a stabilization of the Fe3 O4 bulk by the reconstructed surface. At more negative potentials, a gradual and largely irreversible lifting of the reconstruction is observed due to the onset of oxide reduction.

13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(12): 4777-4790, 2019 Mar 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30768905

RESUMEN

For the knowledged-based development of electrochemical processes, a better fundamental understanding of the interfaces between electrodes and electrolytes is necessary. This requires insight into the interface structure and dynamics on the atomic-scale, including that of the liquid electrolyte in the near-surface region, i.e., in the inner and outer part of the electrochemical double layer. This perspective describes current studies of simple and well-defined electrochemical interfaces by first-principles electronic structure calculations and in situ structure-sensitive methods. It is shown that these experimental and theoretical studies are now approaching a level, where they can operate on the same footing, making direct comparison of the obtained results feasible. Using selected examples, progress in clarifying the structure and dynamics of the double layer, of adsorbed species on electrode surfaces, and of initial steps in electrochemical phase formation processes is discussed.

14.
Chemistry ; 25(56): 12865-12883, 2019 Oct 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31173401

RESUMEN

Atomic-scale processes at electrode surfaces in liquid electrolytes are central elemental steps of electrochemical reactions. Detailed insights into the structure of these interfaces can be obtained with in situ scanning tunnelling and atomic force microscopy. By increasing the time resolution of these methods into the millisecond range, highly dynamic processes at electrode surfaces become directly observable. This review gives an overview of in situ studies with video-rate scanning probe microscopy techniques. Firstly, quantitative investigations into the dynamic behaviour of individual adsorbed atoms and molecules are described. These reveal a complex dependence of adsorbate surface diffusion on potential and co-adsorbed species and provide data on adsorbate-adsorbate and adsorbate-substrate interactions in a liquid environment. Secondly, results on collective dynamic phenomena are discussed, such as molecular self-assembly, the dynamics of nanoscale structures, nucleation and growth, and surface restructuring due to phase-formation processes.

15.
Beilstein J Org Chem ; 15: 1815-1821, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31467601

RESUMEN

Triazatriangulenium (TATA) and trioxatriangulenium (TOTA) ions are particularly suited systems to mount functional molecules onto atomically flat surfaces such as Au(111). The TATA and TOTA units serve as platforms that absorb onto the surface and form ordered monolayers, while the functional groups are protruding upright and freestanding from the central carbon atoms. Azobenzene derivatized TATA's are known to exhibit extremely fast cis→trans isomerization on metal surfaces, via a peculiar non-adiabatic singlet→triplet→singlet mechanism. We now prepared norbornadienes (NBD) and quadricyclanes (QC) attached to TATA and TOTA platforms which can be used to check if these accelerated rates and the spin change mechanism also apply to [2 + 2] cycloreversions (QC→NBD).

16.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(29): 9066-9069, 2018 07 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29983060

RESUMEN

We report direct observation of the formation of a subsurface species at metal electrodes in liquid electrolytes and of its migration within the solid's surface layer, below a chemisorbed electrochemical double layer. Using in situ video-rate scanning tunneling microscopy, we find for adsorbed sulfide on bromide-covered Ag(100) electrodes reversible transitions between adsorption sites on top of the surface and within a vacancy in the first Ag layer. In the latter state, the sulfide surface diffusion can be enhanced by orders of magnitude, which we attribute to vacancy-mediated diffusion underneath the bromide adlayer. The high dynamics within the surface layer, indicated by these observations, may open up alternative pathways in electrocatalytic reactions and growth processes.

17.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 25(Pt 2): 432-438, 2018 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29488923

RESUMEN

X-ray reflectivity studies of the structure of liquid-vapour and liquid-liquid interfaces at modern sources, such as free-electron lasers, are currently impeded by the lack of dedicated liquid surface diffractometers. It is shown that this obstacle can be overcome by an alternative experimental approach that uses the natural curvature of a liquid drop for variation of the angle of incidence. Two modes of operation are shown: (i) sequential reflectivity measurements by a nanometre beam and (ii) parallel acquisition of large ranges of a reflectivity curve by micrometre beams. The feasibility of the two methods is demonstrated by studies of the Hg/vapour, H2O/vapour and Hg/0.1 M NaF interface. The obtained reflectivity curves match the data obtained by conventional techniques up to 5αc in micro-beam mode and up to 35αc in nano-beam mode, allowing observation of the Hg layering peak.

18.
Chemistry ; 24(42): 10732-10744, 2018 Jul 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29693736

RESUMEN

Activating small molecules with transition metal complexes adsorbed on metal surfaces is a novel approach combining aspects of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis. In order to study the influence of an Au(111) substrate on the activation of the small-molecule ligand carbon monoxide, a molybdenum tricarbonyl complex containing a PN3 P pincer ligand was synthesized and investigated in the bulk, in solution, and adsorbed on an Au(111) surface. By means of a platform approach, a perpendicular orientation of the molybdenum complex was achieved and confirmed by IRRAS and NEXAFS. By using vibrational spectroscopy (IR, Raman, IRRAS) coupled to DFT calculations, the influence of the metal substrate on the activation of the CO ligands bound to the molybdenum complex was determined. The electron-withdrawing behavior of gold causes an overall shift of the CO stretching vibrations to higher frequencies, which is partly compensated by dynamic charge transfer from the substrate to the molybdenum center, which increases its (dynamic) polarizability.

19.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 57(21): 6065-6068, 2018 05 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29603557

RESUMEN

Coadsorbed anions are well-known to influence surface reactivity and dynamics at solid-liquid interfaces. Here we demonstrate that the chemical nature of these spectator species can entirely determine the microscopic dynamic behavior. Quantitative in situ video-STM data on the surface diffusion of adsorbed sulfur atoms on Cu(100) electrodes in aqueous solution covered by bromide and chloride spectators, respectively, reveal in both cases a strong exponential potential dependence, but with opposite sign. This reversal is highly surprising in view of the isostructural adsorbate arrangement in the two systems. Detailed DFT studies suggest an anion-induced difference in the sulfur diffusion mechanism, specifically an exchange diffusion on the Br-covered surface. Experimental evidence for the latter is provided by the observation of Cu vacancy formation in the Br system, which can be rationalized by a side reaction of the sulfur exchange diffusion.

20.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(12): 4532-4539, 2017 03 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28252295

RESUMEN

The surface restructuring of Pt(111) electrodes upon electrochemical oxidation/reduction in 0.1 M HClO4 was studied by in situ grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering and complementary scanning tunneling microscopy measurements. These methods allow quantitative determination of the formation and structural evolution of nanoscale Pt islands during potential cycles into the oxidation region. A characteristic ripening behavior is observed, where these islands become more prominent and homogeneous in size with increasing number of cycles. Their characteristic lateral dimensions primarily depend on the upper potential limit of the cycle and only slightly increase with cycle number. The structural evolution of the Pt surface morphology strongly resembles that found in studies of Pt(111) homoepitaxial growth and ion erosion in ultrahigh vacuum. It can be fully explained by a microscopic model based on the known surface dynamic behavior under vacuum conditions, indicating that the same dynamics also describe the structural evolution of Pt in the electrochemical environment.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA