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Influence of Surface Adsorption on the Oxygen Evolution Reaction on IrO2(110)

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

D.-Y. Kuo
J.K. Kawasaki
J.N. Nelson
J. Kloppenburg
G. Hautier
K.M. Shen
D.G. Schlom
J. Suntivich

Abstract

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 IrO2(110) epitaxially grown on a TiO2(110) single crystal. The high quality of the IrO2 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. © 2017 American Chemical Society.

Date Published

Journal

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Volume

139

Issue

9

Number of Pages

3473-3479,

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85014700500&doi=10.1021%2fjacs.6b11932&partnerID=40&md5=5f76040c9856d6e4b72d3ff7167cbe83

DOI

10.1021/jacs.6b11932

Group (Lab)

Kyle Shen Group

Funding Source

DMR-1120296
DGE-1650441
ECCS-0335765
2.5020.11

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