Login / Signup

Molecular O 2 Dimers and Lattice Instability in a Perovskite Electrocatalyst.

Jan BosseJian GuJaewon ChoiVladimir RoddatisYong-Bin ZhuangNagaarjhuna A KaniAnna HartlMirian Garcia-FernandezKe-Jin ZhouAlessandro NicolaouThomas LippertJun ChengAndrew R Akbashev
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Structural degradation of oxide electrodes during the electrocatalytic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is a major challenge in water electrolysis. Although the OER is known to induce changes in the surface layer, little is known about its effect on the bulk of the electrocatalyst and its overall phase stability. Here, we show that under OER conditions, a highly active SrCoO 3- x electrocatalyst develops bulk lattice instability, which results in the formation of molecular O 2 dimers inside the bulk and nanoscale amorphization induced via chemo-mechanical coupling. Using high-resolution resonant inelastic X-ray scattering and first-principles calculations, we unveil the potential-dependent evolution of lattice oxygen inside the perovskite and demonstrate that O 2 dimers are stable in a densely packed crystal lattice, thus challenging the assumption that O 2 dimers require sufficient interatomic spacing. We also show that the energy cost of local atomic rearrangements in SrCoO 3- x becomes very low under the OER conditions, leading to an unusual amorphization under intercalation-induced stress. As a result, we propose that the amorphization energy can be calculated from the first principles and can be used to assess the stability of electrocatalysts. Our study demonstrates that extreme oxidation of electrocatalysts under OER can intrinsically destabilize the lattice and result in bulk anion redox and disorder, suggesting why some oxide materials are unstable and develop a thick amorphous layer under water electrolysis conditions.
Keyphrases