Litcius/Paper detail

Origin of Electrocatalytic Selectivity during the Oxygen Reduction Reaction on Au(111)

Elias Diesen, Alexandra M. Dudzinski, Karsten Reuter, Vanessa J. Bukas

2025ACS Catalysis16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

High Resolution Image Download MS PowerPoint Slide A puzzling observation during the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) on weak-binding electrodes such as Au is the preference to form hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) instead of the thermodynamically favored water product. This selectivity cannot be explained on the basis of thermodynamic reaction models that simply assume a series of proton-coupled electron transfers (PCETs). Here, we use ab initio molecular dynamics along with umbrella sampling to obtain free energy profiles for competing key ORR steps on Au(111). Our comparison includes not only PCETs but also “chemical” reaction steps that do not include an explicit faradaic charge transfer, such as desorption or surface dissociation. This allows one to explore favorable reaction paths while varying the capacitive charging to represent realistic ORR potentials. Our results show that all reaction steps competing with H 2 O 2 formation have sizable kinetic barriers and are thus prohibited, even though they may be thermodynamically favored. We find that this situation does not change under more reducing conditions and specifically determines the “nobleness” of Au as playing a decisive role in preventing O–O bond scission. It is thus not the applied potential but the underlying chemistry that drives the ORR selectivity. Our study overall further highlights the kinetic competition between PCET and non-PCET steps that cannot be resolved via simple Bro̷nsted–Evans–Polanyi scaling relations.

Topics & Concepts

SelectivityOxygen reduction reactionCatalysisElectrocatalystChemistryOxygen reductionReduction (mathematics)OxygenInorganic chemistryPhotochemistryElectrochemistryElectrodeOrganic chemistryPhysical chemistryMathematicsGeometryElectrocatalysts for Energy ConversionCatalytic Processes in Materials ScienceMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures