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Dynamic Roles of Oxygen Vacancies for Surface Hydroxylation in Enhanced Alkaline Hydrogen Evolution

Ke Fan, Weihong Yan, Linqin Wang, Zhaoxia Yang, Chang Yan, Dinghua Zhou, Ji Qi, Anmin Zheng, Licheng Sun

2026Journal of the American Chemical Society7 citationsDOI

Abstract

Oxygen vacancies (V O ) in metal oxide electrocatalysts are widely recognized as key contributors to enhanced hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) activity, yet their precise function during catalysis remains elusive. Here, we investigate V O -rich Co 3 O 4 (a transition-metal oxide with moderate activity) and V O -rich RuO 2 (a high-performance oxide catalyst) as model catalysts to elucidate the dynamic evolution of V O during alkaline HER. Electrochemical analysis demonstrates that V O -rich oxides exhibit significantly enhanced intrinsic HER activity compared to their V O -poor counterparts. Comprehensive operando spectroscopies, ex situ characterizations, and ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations reveal that V O is not inert but is dynamically consumed during HER, facilitating extensive surface hydroxylation. Such surface hydroxylation and reconstruction optimize water molecule adsorption and dissociation, regulate interfacial water distribution, and enhance the connectivity of the hydrogen-bond network at the interface, collectively shifting the reaction pathway from Volmer–Heyrovsky to Volmer–Tafel. These synergistic effects lead to accelerated reaction kinetics and superior HER performance. This work supports the generality of the proposed mechanism across oxide electrocatalysts with vastly different intrinsic activities, provides new insights into the structural dynamics of V O, and highlights the critical role of its induced surface hydroxylation in regulating the interfacial water and hydrogen-bond network, thereby boosting electrocatalytic hydrogen evolution.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryCatalysisOxideHydroxylationOxygen evolutionElectrochemistryAdsorptionHydrogenMoleculeOxygenAutocatalysisKineticsDensity functional theoryReaction mechanismInorganic chemistryHydrogen productionMolecular dynamicsInertReaction intermediateMetalWater splittingElectrolysis of waterAb initioRedoxChemical engineeringHeterogeneous catalysisHydrogen bondHalf-reactionPhotochemistryComputational chemistryElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsAdvanced battery technologies research