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            Carreira, Erick (Ed.)Thehydrogenoxidationreaction(HOR)inalkalineelectrolytesexhibitsmarkedlyslowerkineticsthanthatinacidic electrolytes.Thisposesacriticalchallengeforalkalineexchangemembranefuelcells(AEMFCs).Theslowerkineticsinalkaline electrolytesisoftenattributedtothemoresluggishVolmerstep(hydrogendesorption).IthasbeenshownthatthealkalineHOR activityonthePtsurfacecanbeconsiderablyenhancedbythepresenceofoxophilictransitionmetals(TMs)andsurface-adsorbed hydroxylgroupsonTMs(TM−OHad),althoughtheexactroleofTM−OHadremainsatopicofactivedebates.Herein,usingsingle- atomRh-tailoredPtnanowiresasamodelsystem,wedemonstratethathydroxylgroupsadsorbedontheRhsites(Rh−OHad)can profoundly reorganize the Pt surface water structure to deliver a record-setting alkaline HOR performance. In situ surface characterizations,togetherwiththeoreticalstudies,revealthatsurfaceRh−OHadcouldpromotetheoxygen-downwater(H2O↓)that favorsmorehydrogenbondwithPtsurfaceadsorbedhydrogen(H2O↓···Had-Pt)thanthehydrogen-downwater(OH2↓).TheH2O↓ furtherservesasthebridgetofacilitatetheformationofanenergeticallyfavorablesix-membered-ringtransitionstructurewith neighboringPt−Had andRh−OHad,thusreducingtheVolmerstepactivationenergyandboostingHORkinetics.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 9, 2026
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            Abstract Cu is the most promising metal catalyst for CO2electroreduction (CO2RR) to multi-carbon products, yet the structure sensitivity of the reaction and the stability versus restructuring of the catalyst surface under reaction conditions remain controversial. Here, atomic scale simulations of surface energies and reaction pathway kinetics supported by experimental evidence unveil that CO2RR does not take place on perfect planar Cu(111) and Cu(100) surfaces but rather on steps or kinks. These planar surfaces tend to restructure in reaction conditions to the active stepped surfaces, with the strong binding of CO on defective sites acting as a thermodynamic driving force. Notably, we identify that the square motifs adjacent to defects, not the defects themselves, as the active sites for CO2RR via synergistic effect. We evaluate these mechanisms against experiments of CO2RR on ultra-high vacuum-prepared ultraclean Cu surfaces, uncovering the crucial role of step-edge orientation in steering selectivity. Overall, our study refines the structural sensitivity of CO2RR on Cu at the atomic level, highlights the self-activation mechanism and elucidates the origin of in situ restructuring of Cu surfaces during the reaction.more » « less
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            The covalent interaction of N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) with transition metal atoms gives rise to distinctive frontier molecular orbitals (FMOs). These emergent electronic states have spurred the widespread adoption of NHC ligands in chemical catalysis and functional materials. Although formation of carbene-metal complexes in self-assembled monolayers on surfaces has been explored, design and electronic structure characterization of extended low-dimensional NHC-metal lattices remains elusive. Here we demonstrate a modular approach to engineering one-dimensional (1D) metal-organic chains and two-dimensional (2D) Kagome lattices using the FMOs of NHC–Au–NHC junctions to create low-dimensional molecular networks exhibiting intrinsic metallicity. Scanning tunneling spectroscopy and first-principles density functional theory reveal the contribution of C–Au–C π-bonding states to dispersive bands that imbue 1D- and 2D-NHC lattices with exceptionally small work functions.more » « less
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            Abstract The dynamic restructuring of Cu surfaces in electroreduction conditions is of fundamental interest in electrocatalysis. We decode the structural dynamics of a Cu(111) electrode under reduction conditions by joint first‐principles calculations and operando electrochemical scanning tunneling microscopy (ECSTM) experiments. Combining global optimization and grand canonical density functional theory, we unravel the potential‐ and pH‐dependent restructuring of Cu(111) in acidic electrolyte. At reductive potential, Cu(111) is covered by a high density of H atoms and, below a threshold potential, Cu adatoms are formed on the surface in a (4×4) superstructure, a restructuring unfavorable in vacuum. The strong H adsorption is the driving force for the restructuring, itself induced by the electrode potential. On the restructured surface, barriers for hydrogen evolution reaction steps are low. Restructuring in electroreduction conditions creates highly active Cu adatom sites not present on Cu(111).more » « less
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