Understanding intermediates adsorption in oxygen reduction/evolution reactions from the local aromaticities of catalyst sites

[Display omitted] •Adsorptions of all ORR/OER intermediates on various graphene-based electrocatalysts are studied.•Direct correlation between adsorption strength of a surface site and its local aromaticity is found.•The catalysts always maximumly preserve their system aromaticity and structural sta...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inApplied surface science Vol. 672; p. 160843
Main Authors Zhao, Yinsheng, Jin, Peng
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.11.2024
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:[Display omitted] •Adsorptions of all ORR/OER intermediates on various graphene-based electrocatalysts are studied.•Direct correlation between adsorption strength of a surface site and its local aromaticity is found.•The catalysts always maximumly preserve their system aromaticity and structural stability during the reaction.•A novel understanding of heterogeneous catalysis reactivity from the magnetic response properties of catalysts is provided. The adsorption behaviors of active sites for various adsorbates in reactions determine the performance of a catalyst, and different surface positions usually exhibit diverse adsorption strengths for the same species. Herein, density functional theory calculations were conducted to study the adsorptions of all oxygen-containing intermediates in oxygen reduction/evolution reactions (ORR/OER) on the surfaces of various graphene-based electrocatalysts with varied heteroatoms and coordination environments. By using the local aromaticity concept, we found a direct correlation between the adsorption strength of a metal/nonmetal site and its NICS(1)ZZ (perpendicular tensor of the nucleus-independent chemical shift at 1 Å above plane) value: positive (antiaromatic) and negative (aromatic) values basically correspond to stronger and weaker adsorptions, respectively. Consistently, the linear relationship between aromatic characteristics and adsorption behavior can be obtained from the magnetic induced ring currents at the surface sites as well. The stronger adsorptions at the antiaromatic sites may because these catalysts always tend to maximumly preserve their global aromaticities and structural stabilities. Our work not only demonstrates that local aromaticity can serve as a useful indicator for predicting/evaluating the adsorption abilities of various catalyst sites, but also provides a novel understanding of the complex heterocatalytic process from the magnetic response properties of catalysts.
ISSN:0169-4332
DOI:10.1016/j.apsusc.2024.160843