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Origin of the Activity of Electrochemical Ozone Production Over Rutile PbO 2 Surfaces.

Jin-Tao JiangZhongyuan GuoShao-Kang DengXue JiaHeng LiuJiang XuHao LiLi-Hua Cheng
Published in: ChemSusChem (2024)
Ozonation water treatment technology has attracted increasing attention due to its environmental benign and high efficiency. Rutile PbO 2 is a promising anode material for electrochemical ozone production (EOP). However, the reaction mechanism underlying ozone production catalyzed by PbO 2 was rarely studied and not well-understood, which was in part due to the overlook of the electrochemistry-driven formation of oxygen vacancy (O V ) of PbO 2 . Herein, we unrevealed the origin of the EOP activity of PbO 2 starting from the electrochemical surface state analysis using density functional theory (DFT) calculations, activity analysis, and catalytic volcano modeling. Interestingly, we found that under experimental EOP potential (i. e., a potential around 2.2 V vs. reversible hydrogen electrode), O V can still be generated easily on PbO 2 surfaces. Our subsequent kinetic and thermodynamic analyses show that these O V sites on PbO 2 surfaces are highly active for the EOP reaction through an interesting atomic oxygen (O*)-O 2 coupled mechanism. In particular, rutile PbO 2 (101) with the "in-situ" generated O V exhibited superior EOP activities, outperforming the (111) and (110) surfaces. Finally, by catalytic volcano modeling, we found that PbO 2 is close to the theoretical optimum of the reaction, suggesting a superior EOP performance of rutile PbO 2 . All these analyses are in good agreement with previous experimental observations in terms of EOP overpotentials. This study provides the first volcano model to explain why rutile PbO 2 is among the best metal oxide materials for EOP and provides new design guidelines for this rarely studied but industrially promising reaction.
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