In Situ Spectroelectrochemical Detection of Oxygen Evolution Reaction Intermediates with a Carboxylated Graphene-MnO2 Electrocatalyst

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2022 Feb 2;14(4):5177-5182. doi: 10.1021/acsami.1c17909. Epub 2022 Jan 20.

Abstract

In electrocatalyst-assisted water splitting, the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) imposes a performance limit due to the formation of different catalyst-bound intermediates and the scaling relationship of their adsorption energies. To break this scaling relationship in OER, a bifunctional mechanism was proposed recently, in which the energetically demanding step of forming the *OOH intermediate, through the attack of a water molecule on the oxo unit (*O, with * representing a reactive metal center), is facilitated by proton transfer to the second catalytic site. This mechanism was supported theoretically but so far by only very few experiments with a proton-transfer agent in basic media. However, active metal-containing catalysts could be destroyed in alkaline media, raising questions on practical applications. To date, this mechanism still lacks a systematic spectroscopic support by observing the short-lived and limited amount of reactive intermediates. Here, we report an operando Raman spectroscopic observation of the OER intermediates in neutral media, for the first time, via a bifunctional mechanism using a carboxylated graphene-MnO2 (represented by Gr-C-MnO2) electrocatalyst. The formation of the Mn-OOH intermediate after the attack of a water molecule on the Mn═O complex is followed by a proton transfer from Mn-OOH to the functionalized carboxylates. The role of the functionalized carboxylates to improve the catalytic efficiency was further confirmed by both pH-dependent and isotope (H/D)-labeling experiments. Furthermore, with a unique strategy of using a hybrid aqueous/nonaqueous electrolyte, the OER was alleviated, allowing sufficient Mn-OH and Mn-OOH intermediates for in situ Raman spectroscopic observation.

Keywords: Raman spectroscopy; electrochemistry; graphene-supported manganese oxide; oxygen evolution reaction intermediates; reaction mechanism.