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The interaction between catalyst surfaces and adsorbed oxygen intermediates is critical to catalytic performance for electrochemical water oxidation to oxygen. However, the relationship between adsorption energetics and electrocatalytic activity is primarily assessed for pristine catalyst materials, which leaves much unknown about the dynamics of these properties in relationship to catalyst performance during long-term operation. In this work, we experimentally assess OH and O adsorption on Ca2IrO4 nanoparticles and monitor their evolution during extensive chronoamperometry tests at highly oxidizing potentials in a range of low pH electrolytes. In situ x-ray absorption spectroscopy reveals changes for surface adsorbate energetics and local iridium structures with applied potentials. Increasingly unfavorable adsorption of OH and formation of O intermediates after long-term operation is correlated with severe metal dissolution, distorted [IrO6] octahedral linkages, and a decreased average Ir valence. This work establishes connections between surface adsorption energetics, Ir structure, OER kinetics, and material stability outcomes.more » « less
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Carbon-supported nanocomposites are attracting particular attention as high-performance, low-cost electrocatalysts for electrochemical water splitting. These are mostly prepared by pyrolysis and hydrothermal procedures that are time-consuming (from hours to days) and typically difficult to produce a nonequilibrium phase. Herein, for the first time ever, we exploit magnetic induction heating-quenching for ultrafast production of carbon-FeNi spinel oxide nanocomposites (within seconds), which exhibit an unprecedentedly high performance towards oxygen evolution reaction (OER), with an ultralow overpotential of only +260 mV to reach the high current density of 100 mA cm -2 . Experimental and theoretical studies show that the rapid heating and quenching process (ca. 10 3 K s -1 ) impedes the Ni and Fe phase segregation and produces a Cl-rich surface, both contributing to the remarkable catalytic activity. Results from this study highlight the unique advantage of ultrafast heating/quenching in the structural engineering of functional nanocomposites to achieve high electrocatalytic performance towards important electrochemical reactions.more » « less
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Carbon nanocomposites based on transition-metal oxides have been attracting extensive attention as cost-effective catalysts towards the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). However, the activity remains subpar as compared to state-of-the-art platinum catalysts. One way to enhance the ORR performance is to dope a second metal into the nanocomposite to manipulate the electronic structure and hence the interactions with key reaction intermediates. Herein, dual metal (Ru and Fe) and nitrogen codoped carbon (RuFe-NC) nanocomposites were synthesized by controlled pyrolysis of a Fe–Ru–Fe trinuclear complex along with zeolitic imidazolate framework-8. The obtained porous nanocomposites consisted of Ru-doped Fe 2 O 3 nanoparticles embedded within a carbon scaffold, and exhibited an ORR activity in alkaline media rivaling that of commercial Pt/C, which was also markedly better than those of the monometallic counterparts and nanocomposites prepared with a simple mixture of the individual monometallic compound precursors. Structural characterization suggests that the use of the trinuclear complex facilitated the atomic dispersion of ruthenium within the iron oxide nanoparticles and charge transfer between the metal centers led to a high ORR activity. Results from this study suggest that rational design of heteronuclear complexes may be a unique strategy in the structural engineering of carbon-metal nanocomposites for high-performance electrocatalysis.more » « less