Beyond domain alignment: Revealing the effect of intrinsic magnetic order on electrochemical water splitting
To reach a long term viable green hydrogen economy, rational design of active oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalysts is critical. An important hurdle in this reaction originates from the fact that the reactants are singlet molecules, whereas the oxygen molecule has a triplet ground state with par...
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Zusammenfassung: | To reach a long term viable green hydrogen economy, rational design of active
oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalysts is critical. An important hurdle in
this reaction originates from the fact that the reactants are singlet
molecules, whereas the oxygen molecule has a triplet ground state with parallel
spin alignment, implying that magnetic order in the catalyst is essential.
Accordingly, multiple experimentalists reported a positive effect of external
magnetic fields on OER activity of ferromagnetic catalysts. However, it remains
a challenge to investigate the influence of the intrinsic magnetic order on
catalytic activity. Here, we tuned the intrinsic magnetic order of epitaxial
La$_{0.67}$Sr$_{0.33}$MnO$_{3}$ thin film model catalysts from ferro- to
paramagnetic by changing the temperature in-situ during water electrolysis.
Using this strategy, we show that ferromagnetic ordering below the Curie
temperature enhances OER activity. Moreover, we show a slight current density
enhancement upon application of an external magnetic field and find that the
dependence of magnetic field direction correlates with the magnetic anisotropy
in the catalyst film. Our work thus suggests that both the intrinsic magnetic
order in La$_{0.67}$Sr$_{0.33}$MnO$_{3}$ films and magnetic domain alignment
increase their catalytic activity. We observe no long-range magnetic order at
the catalytic surface, implying that the OER enhancement is connected to the
magnetic order of the bulk catalyst. Combining the effects found with existing
literature, we propose a unifying picture for the spin-polarized enhancement in
magnetic oxide catalysts. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2308.16654 |