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  • Invited talk
  • IM7.001-invited

Unveiling the dynamic behavior of electrocatalysts through operando microscopy and spectroscopy

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aurum

Session

In situ/operando electron microscopy

Topic

  • IM 7: In situ/operando electron microscopy

Authors

Beatriz Roldan Cuenya (Berlin / DE)

Abstract

Abstract text (incl. figure legends and references)

Climate change concerns have spurred a growing interest in developing environmentally friendly technologies for energy generation, including green H2 production from water splitting. Moreover, concerted attempts are also being made to re-utilize CO2 by electrocatalytically converting it into value-added chemicals and fuels, offering the possibility to store renewable energy into chemical bonds. Thus, efficient, selective and durable electrocatalysts that can operate under mild reaction conditions are urgently needed. However, the latter challenging goal can only be achieved when fundamental understanding of the electrocatalyst structure and surface composition under reaction conditions becomes available. It should also be kept in mind that even morphologically and chemically well-defined pre-catalysts are commonly susceptible to drastic modifications under operando conditions, especially when the reaction conditions themselves change dynamically. Here, a synergistic experimental approach taking advantage of a variety of cutting-edge microscopy (EC-AFM, EC-TEM, LEEM/XPEEM), spectroscopy (NAP-XPS, XAS, Raman Spect., GC/MS) and diffraction (XRD) will be employed to unveil the complexity of energy conversion electrocatalysts.

In particular, I will provide new insights into the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 and Nitrate as well as the oxygen evolution reaction using operando characterization methods while targeting model pre-catalyst systems ranging from single crystals to metal nanoparticles. Some of the aspects that will be discussed include: (i) the design of size- and shape-controlled catalytically active nanoparticle pre-catalysts (Cu, Cu2O cubes, CoOx NPs, Fe/NiO octahedra), (ii) the understanding of the active state formation and (iii) the correlation between the dynamically evolving structure and composition of these electrocatalysts under operando reaction conditions and their activity, selectivity and durability.

Our results are expected to open up new routes for the reutilization of CO2 through its direct conversion into industrially valuable chemicals such as ethylene and ethanol, the electrochemical synthesis of ammonia and the generation of H2 through water splitting.

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