Action at a distance: organic cation induced long range organization of interfacial water enhances hydrogen evolution and oxidation kinetics

Engineering efficient electrode-electrolyte interfaces for the hydrogen evolution and oxidation reactions (HOR/HER) is central to the growing hydrogen economy. Existing descriptors for HOR/HER catalysts focused on species that could directly impact the immediate micro-environment of surface-mediated...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical science (Cambridge) 2023-10, Vol.14 (4), p.1176-1187
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Kaiyue, Yu, Hao, Xiong, Haocheng, Lu, Qi, Gao, Yi Qin, Xu, Bingjun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Engineering efficient electrode-electrolyte interfaces for the hydrogen evolution and oxidation reactions (HOR/HER) is central to the growing hydrogen economy. Existing descriptors for HOR/HER catalysts focused on species that could directly impact the immediate micro-environment of surface-mediated reactions, such as the binding energies of adsorbates. In this work, we demonstrate that bulky organic cations, such as tetrapropyl ammonium, are able to induce a long-range structure of interfacial water molecules and enhance the HOR/HER kinetics even though they are located outside the outer Helmholtz plane. Through a combination of electrokinetic analysis, molecular dynamics and in situ spectroscopic investigations, we propose that the structure-making ability of bulky hydrophobic cations promotes the formation of hydrogen-bonded water chains connecting the electrode surface to the bulk electrolyte. In alkaline electrolytes, the HOR/HER involve the activation of interfacial water by donating or abstracting protons. The structural diffusion mechanism of protons in aqueous electrolytes enables water molecules and cations located at a distance from the electrode to influence surface-mediated reactions. The findings reported in this work highlight the prospect of leveraging the nonlocal mechanism to enhance electrocatalytic performance. The structure-making ability of bulky hydrophobic cations promotes the formation of hydrogen-bonded water chains connecting the electrode surface to the bulk electrolyte, which in turn facilitates the hydrogen oxidation and evolution reactions.
ISSN:2041-6520
2041-6539
DOI:10.1039/d3sc03300g