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1.
Chem Sci ; 13(46): 13879-13892, 2022 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36544721

ABSTRACT

The main challenge for acidic water electrolysis is the lack of active and stable oxygen evolution catalysts based on abundant materials, which are globally scalable. Iridium oxide is the only material which is active and stable. However, Ir is extremely rare. While both active materials and stable materials exist, those that are active are usually not stable and vice versa. In this work, we present a new design strategy for activating stable materials originally deemed unsuitable due to a semiconducting nature and wide band gap energy. These stable semiconductors cannot change oxidation state under the relevant reaction conditions. Based on DFT calculations, we find that adding an n-type dopant facilitates oxygen binding on semiconductor surfaces. The binding is, however, strong and prevents further binding or desorption of oxygen. By combining both n-type and p-type dopants, the reactivity can be tuned so that oxygen can be adsorbed and desorbed under reaction conditions. The tuning results from the electrostatic interactions between the dopants as well as between the dopants and the binding site. This concept is experimentally verified on TiO2 by co-substituting with different pairs of n- and p-type dopants. Our findings suggest that the co-substitution approach can be used to activate stable materials, with no intrinsic oxygen evolution activity, to design new catalysts for acid water electrolysis.

2.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(41): 37748-37760, 2019 Oct 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31535842

ABSTRACT

Density functional theory (DFT) has proven to be an invaluable and effective tool for identifying highly active electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Herein, we take a computational approach to first identify a series of rare-earth pyrochlore oxides based on Ir and Ru as potential OER catalysts. The DFT-based phase diagrams, Pourbaix diagrams (E vs pH), projected density of states, and band energy diagrams were used to identify prospective OER catalysts based on rare-earth Ir and Ru pyrochlores. The predicted materials were synthesized using the spray-freeze freeze-drying approach to afford nanoparticulate oxides conforming to the pyrochlore structural type A2B2O7 where A = Nd, Gd, or Yb and B = Ir or Ru. In agreement with the computed Pourbaix diagrams, the materials were found to be moderately stable under OER conditions. All prepared materials show higher stability as compared to the benchmark IrO2 catalyst, and the OER mass activity of Yb2Ir2O7 and the ruthenate pyrochlores (Nd2Ru2O7, Gd2Ru2O7, and Yb2Ru2O7) were also found to exceed those of the benchmark IrO2 catalyst. We find that the OER activity of each pyrochlore series (i.e., iridate or ruthenate) generally improves as the size of the A-site cation decreases, indicating that maintaining control over the structure can be used to influence the electrocatalytic properties.

3.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(18): 16506-16516, 2019 May 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30985106

ABSTRACT

The role of surface dimensionality in photo-electrochemical water oxidation was studied for different-sized SrTiO3 nanocubes. The band gap illumination of strontium titanate electrodes results in anodic current; the photo-current appears at a bias of ca. 220 mV with respect to flat-band potential. The bias needed to record anodic photo-current increases with pH, reflecting the change in the protonation of surface oxygen atoms. The photo-electrochemical activity of SrTiO3 nanocubes is size-dependent and increases with increasing particle size. Semiquantitative analysis of the observed photo-currents combined with mass spectrometric detection of the reaction products shows that the contact of water with illuminated SrTiO3 nanocubes leads to the formation of oxygen, hydrogen peroxide, and ozone. Oxygen and ozone are the primary products of the water oxidation proceeding on {100}-oriented SrTiO3 faces and their fractions increase with increasing particle size. The hydrogen peroxide is simultaneously produced via oxygen reduction at the low-dimensionality sites (crystal edges, vertices), the abundance of which increases with decreasing particle size.

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