First-Principles Simulations of Water Dissociation on RuO<sub>2</sub>(110)
ORAL
Abstract
The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is a catalytic process pivotal to electrolysis and photosynthesis, whose kinetic rate correlates strongly with the ability of the catalyst to activate interfacial water molecules. To predict the dissociation of surface water into OH* and O* at the surface sites * of the prototypical RuO2(110) electrocatalyst, we develop and apply a voltage-dependent model of the solvated surface. In the presence of surface-bound water molecules, increasing the oxidative potential strips hydrogen away following two spatially correlated desorption steps: a sequence of dehydrogenation events that transforms the water molecules into an array of alternating OHH* and OH* species and the subsequent sudden desorption of all protons. First-principles calculations with interfacial polarization, capacitive charging, and adsorbate interactions attribute this evolution to the cooperative dehydrogenation of OHH* and OH* on RuO2. We use these results to map the surface phase diagram of RuO2(110) and provide a quantitative interpretation of its cyclic voltammetry. Our results offer atomistic insights into water dissociation on conductive oxide surfaces, which is a critical step in the OER, and demonstrate that water activation at RuO2 is a collective interfacial phenomenon.
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Publication: Tracking Water Dissociation on RuO2(110) using Atomic Force Microscopy and First-Principles Simulations, Submitted to Journal of the American Chemical Society
Presenters
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Simon Gelin
Carnegie Mellon University
Authors
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Simon Gelin
Carnegie Mellon University
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Austin J Reese
Cornell University
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Maria Maalouf
California State University, Long Beach
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Neha Wadehra
Cornell University
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Lei Zhang
Dartmouth College
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Geoffroy Hautier
Dartmouth College
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Darrell G Schlom
Cornell University, Platform for the Accelerated Realization, Analysis, and Discovery of Interface Materials (PARADIM), Cornell University
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Ismaila Dabo
Carnegie Mellon University
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Jin Suntivich
Cornell University