A catalyst functions by stabilizing reaction intermediates, usually through surface adsorption. In the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), surface oxygen adsorption plays an indispensable role in the electrocatalysis. The relationship between the adsorption energetics and OER kinetics, however, has not yet been experimentally measured. Herein we report an experimental relationship between the adsorption of surface oxygen and the kinetics of the OER on IrO(110) epitaxially grown on a TiO(110) single crystal. The high quality of the IrO film grown using molecular-beam epitaxy affords the ability to extract the surface oxygen adsorption and its impact on the OER. By examining a series of electrolytes, we find that the adsorption energy changes linearly with pH, which we attribute to the electrified interfacial water. We support this hypothesis by showing that an electrolyte salt modification can lead to an adsorption energy shift. The dependence of the adsorption energy on pH has implications for the OER kinetics, but it is not the only factor; the dependence of the OER electrocatalysis on pH stipulates two OER mechanisms, one operating in acidic solution and another operating in alkaline solution. Our work points to the subtle adsorption-kinetics relationship in the OER and highlights the importance of the interfacial electrified interaction in electrocatalyst design.
We report the hydroxide (OH ad ) and oxide (O ad ) experimental electroadsorption free energies, their dependences on pH, and their correlations to the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) electrocatalysis on RuO 2 (110) surface. The Sabatier principle predicts that catalyst is most active when the intermediate stabilization is moderate, not too strong such that the bound intermediate disrupts the subsequent catalytic cycle, nor too weak such that the surface is ineffective. For decades, researchers have used this concept to rationalize the activity trend of many OER electrocatalysts including RuO 2 , which is among the state-of-the-art OER catalysts. In this article, we report an experimental assessment of the Sabatier principle by comparing the oxygen electroadsorption energy to the OER electrocatalysis for the first time on RuO 2 . We find that the OH ad and O ad electroadsorption energies on RuO 2 (110) depend on pH and obey the scaling relation. However, we did not observe a direct correlation between the OH ad and O ad electroadsorption energies and the OER activity in the comparative analysis that includes both RuO 2 (110) and IrO 2 (110). Our result raises a question of whether the Sabatier principle can describe highly active electrocatalysts, where the kinetic aspects may influence the electrocatalysis more strongly than the electroadsorption energy, which captures only the thermodynamics of the intermediates and not yet kinetics.
The use of renewable electricity to prepare materials and fuels from abundant molecules offers a tantalizing opportunity to address concerns over energy and materials sustainability. The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is integral to nearly all material and fuel electrosyntheses. However, very little is known about the structural evolution of the OER electrocatalyst, especially the amorphous layer that forms from the crystalline structure. Here, we investigate the interfacial transformation of the SrIrO3 OER electrocatalyst. The SrIrO3 amorphization is initiated by the lattice oxygen redox, a step that allows Sr2+ to diffuse and O2− to reorganize the SrIrO3 structure. This activation turns SrIrO3 into a highly disordered Ir octahedral network with Ir square-planar motif. The final SryIrOx exhibits a greater degree of disorder than IrOx made from other processing methods. Our results demonstrate that the structural reorganization facilitated by coupled ionic diffusions is essential to the disordered structure of the SrIrO3 electrocatalyst.
Electrochemical generation of oxygen via the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is a key enabling step for many air-breathing electrochemical energy storage devices.
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