Litcius/Paper detail

Iridium Oxide Coordinatively Unsaturated Active Sites Govern the Electrocatalytic Oxidation of Water

Juan Jesús Velasco Vélez, Denis Bernsmeier, Rik V. Mom, Patrick Zeller, Yang Shao‐Horn, Beatriz Roldán Cuenya, Axel Knop‐Gericke, Robert Schlögl, Travis E. Jones

2024Advanced Energy Materials27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract A special membrane electrode assembly to measure operando X‐ray absorption spectra and resonant photoemission spectra of mesoporous templated iridium oxide films is used. These films are calcined to different temperatures to mediate the catalyst activity. By combining operando resonant photoemission measurements of different films with ab initio simulations these are able to unambiguously distinguish µ 2 ‐O (bridging oxygen) and µ 1 ‐O (terminal oxygen) in the near‐surface regions of the catalysts. The intrinsic activity of iridium oxide scales with the formation of µ 1 ‐O (terminal oxygen) is found. Importantly, it is shown that the peroxo species do not accumulate under reaction conditions. Rather, the formation of µ 1 ‐O species, which are active in O−O bond formation during the OER, is the most oxidized oxygen species observed, which is consistent with an O−O rate‐limiting step. Thus, the oxygen species taking part in the electrochemical oxidation of water on iridium electrodes are more involved and complex than previously stated. This result highlights the importance of employing theory together with true and complementary operando measurements capable of probing different aspects of catalysts surfaces during operation.

Topics & Concepts

IridiumCatalysisOxygenElectrochemistryOxideMaterials scienceOxygen evolutionMesoporous materialCalcinationInorganic chemistryElectrodePhotochemistryPhysical chemistryChemistryOrganic chemistryMetallurgyElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCatalytic Processes in Materials ScienceElectrochemical Analysis and Applications