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Operando identification of site-dependent water oxidation activity on ruthenium dioxide single-crystal surfaces

Authors :
Apurva Mehta
Hoydoo You
Anders Pedersen
Reshma R. Rao
Yu Katayama
Hua Zhou
Tejs Vegge
Livia Giordano
Jaclyn R. Lunger
Niels Bendtsen Halck
Ifan E. L. Stephens
Yang Shao-Horn
Jonathan Hwang
Manuel J. Kolb
Ib Chorkendorff
Rao, R
Kolb, M
Giordano, L
Pedersen, A
Katayama, Y
Hwang, J
Mehta, A
You, H
Lunger, J
Zhou, H
Halck, N
Vegge, T
Chorkendorff, I
Stephens, I
Shao-Horn, Y
Source :
Rao, R R, Kolb, M J, Giordano, L, Pedersen, A F, Katayama, Y, Hwang, J, Mehta, A, You, H, Lunger, J R, Zhou, H, Halck, N B, Vegge, T, Chorkendorff, I, Stephens, I & Shao-Horn, Y 2020, ' Operando identification of site-dependent water oxidation activity on ruthenium dioxide single-crystal surfaces ', Nature Catalysis, vol. 3, no. 6, pp. 516-525 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41929-020-0457-6
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Understanding the nature of active sites is central to controlling (electro)catalytic activity. Here we employed surface X-ray scattering coupled with density functional theory and surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy to examine the oxygen evolution reaction on RuO2 surfaces as a function of voltage. At 1.5 VRHE, our results suggest that there is an –OO group on the coordinatively unsaturated ruthenium (RuCUS) site of the (100) surface (and similarly for (110)), but adsorbed oxygen on the RuCUS site of (101). Density functional theory results indicate that the removal of –OO from the RuCUS site, which is stabilized by a hydrogen bond to a neighbouring –OH (–OO–H), could be the rate-determining step for (100) (similarly for (110)), where its reduced binding on (100) increased activity. A further reduction in binding energy on the RuCUS site of (101) resulted in a different rate-determining step (–O + H2O – (H+ + e−) → –OO–H) and decreased activity. Our study provides molecular details on the active sites, and the influence of their local coordination environment on activity. Understanding the nature of active sites is central to controlling the activity of a given catalyst. This work combines operando characterization and computational techniques to examine the oxygen evolution reaction mechanism on RuO2 surfaces.

Details

ISSN :
25201158
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Catalysis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1926b19045e447a7aa813f3d0548a086
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41929-020-0457-6