Electrochemical energy storage by making H2 an energy carrier from water splitting relies on four elementary reactions, i.e., the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), hydrogen oxidation reaction (HOR), oxygen evolution reaction (OER), and oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Herein, the central objective is to recommend systematic protocols for activity measurements of these four reactions and benchmark activities for comparison, which is critical to facilitate the research and development of catalysts with high activity and stability. Details for the electrochemical cell setup, measurements, and data analysis used to quantify the kinetics of the HER, HOR, OER, and ORR in acidic and basic solutions are provided, and examples of state‐of‐the‐art specific and mass activity of catalysts to date are given. First, the experimental setup is discussed to provide common guidelines for these reactions, including the cell design, reference electrode selection, counter electrode concerns, and working electrode preparation. Second, experimental protocols, including data collection and processing such as ohmic‐ and background‐correction and catalyst surface area estimation, and practice for testing and comparing different classes of catalysts are recommended. Lastly, the specific and mass activity activities of some state‐of‐the‐art catalysts are benchmarked to facilitate the comparison of catalyst activity for these four reactions across different laboratories.
The production of molecular hydrogen by catalyzing water splitting is central to achieving the decarbonization of sustainable fuels and chemical transformations. In this work, a series of structure-making/breaking cations in the electrolyte were investigated as spectator cations in hydrogen evolution and oxidation reactions (HER/HOR) in the pH range of 1 to 14, whose kinetics was found to be altered by up to 2 orders of magnitude by these cations. The exchange current density of HER/HOR was shown to increase with greater structure-making tendency of cations in the order of Cs + < Rb + < K + < Na + < Li + , which was accompanied by decreasing reorganization energy from the Marcus–Hush–Chidsey formalism and increasing reaction entropy. Invoking the Born model of reorganization energy and reaction entropy, the static dielectric constant of the electrolyte at the electrified interface was found to be significantly lower than that of bulk, decreasing with the structure-making tendency of cations at the negatively charged Pt surface. The physical origin of cation-dependent HER/HOR kinetics can be rationalized by an increase in concentration of cations on the negatively charged Pt surface, altering the interfacial water structure and the H-bonding network, which is supported by classical molecular dynamics simulation and surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy. This work highlights immense opportunities to control the reaction rates by tuning interfacial structures of cation and solvents.
Proton activity at the electrified interface is central to the kinetics of proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions for making chemicals and fuels. Here we employed a library of protic ionic liquids in an interfacial layer on Pt and Au to alter local proton activity, where the intrinsic ORR activity was enhanced up to 5 times, exhibiting a
Understanding and controlling non-covalent interactions associated with solvent molecules and redox-inactive ions provide new opportunities to enhance the reaction entropy changes and reaction kinetics of metal redox centers, which can increase the thermodynamic efficiency of energy conversion and storage devices. Here, we report systematic changes in the redox entropy of one-electron transfer reactions including [Fe(CN)6]3-/4-, [Fe(H2O)6]3+/2+ and [Ag(H2O)4]+/0 induced by the addition of redox inactive ions, where approximately twenty different known structure making/breaking ions were employed. The measured reaction entropy changes of these redox couples were found to increase linearly with higher concentration and greater structural entropy (having greater structure breaking tendency) for inactive ions with opposite charge to the redox centers. The trend could be attributed to the altered solvation shells of oxidized and reduced redox active species due to non-covalent interactions among redox centers, inactive ions and water molecules, which was supported by Raman spectroscopy. Not only were these non-covalent interactions shown to increase reaction entropy, but they were also found to systematically alter the redox kinetics, where increasing redox reaction energy changes associated with the presence of water structure breaking cations were correlated linearly with the greater exchange current density of [Fe(CN)6]3-/4-.
The kinetics of aqueous outer-sphere electron-transfer (ET) reactions are determined in large part by noncovalent electrostatic interactions that originate from the surrounding electrolyte solution. In this work, we examine the role of spectator cations in modifying the rate of heterogeneous ET for an [Fe(CN)6]3–/[Fe(CN)6]4– redox pair. We combine the results of electrochemical measurement, in situ surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (SEIRAS), classical molecular dynamics simulation, and theoretical modeling to demonstrate how changing the identity of the spectator cation species over a series that includes Li+, Na+, K+, Rb+ to Cs+ influences the solvation properties and ET kinetics of the redox species. By analyzing the results in the context of the Marcus–Hush–Chidsey (MHC) theory, we find that the solvent reorganization energy increases systematically as the cationic radius decreases. The trend can be attributed to cation-dependent coordination environments of the redox species, whereby more cations of less charge density such as Cs+ than Li+ are present in the redox solvation shell in bulk and at the electrified interface, promoting weaker hydrogen bonds and lowering the effective interfacial static dielectric constant. We discuss the implications of these findings for enabling the tunability of reaction thermodynamics and rates in electrochemical processes.
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