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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38963822

ABSTRACT

The strategic design of catalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is crucial in tackling the substantial energy demands associated with hydrogen production in electrolytic water splitting. Despite extensive research on birnessite (δ-MnO2) manganese oxides to enhance catalytic activity by modulating Mn3+ species, the ongoing challenge is to simultaneously stabilize Mn3+ while improving overall activity. Herein, oxygen (O) vacancies and nitrogen (N) doping have been simultaneously introduced into the MnO2 through a simple nitrogen plasma approach, resulting in efficient OER performance. The optimized N-MnO2v electrocatalyst exhibits outstanding OER activity in alkaline electrolyte, reducing the overpotential by nearly 160 mV compared to pure pristine MnO2 (from 476 to 312 mV) at 10 mA cm-2, and a small Tafel slope of 89 mV dec-1. Moreover, it demonstrates excellent durability over a 122 h stability test. The introduction of O vacancies and incorporation of N not only fine-tune the electronic structure of MnO2, increasing the Mn3+ content to enhance overall activity, but also play a crucial role in stabilizing Mn3+, thereby leading to exceptional stability over time. Subsequently, density functional theory calculations validate the optimized electronic structure of MnO2 achieved through the two engineering methods, effectively lowering the intermediate adsorption free energy barrier. Our synergistic approach, utilizing nitrogen plasma treatment, opens a pathway to concurrently enhance the activity and stability of OER electrocatalysts, applicable not only to Mn-based but also to other transition metal oxides.

2.
Small ; : e2402323, 2024 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38953346

ABSTRACT

Constructing dual-site catalysts consisting of atomically dispersed metal single atoms and metal atomic clusters (MACs) is a promising approach to further boost the catalytic activity for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Herein, a porous CoSA-AC@SNC featuring the coexistence of Co single-atom sites (CoN4) and S-coordinated Co atomic clusters (SCo6) in S, N co-doped carbon substrate is successfully synthesized by using porphyrinic metal-organic framework (Co-TPyP MOF) as the precursor. The introduction of the sulfur source creates abundant microstructural defects to anchor Co metal clusters, thus modulating the electronic structure of its surrounding carbon substrate. The synergistic effect between the two types of active sites and structural advantages, in turn, results in high ORR performance of CoSA-AC@SNC with half-wave potential (E1/2) of 0.86 V and Tafel slope of 50.17 mV dec-1. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations also support the synergistic effect between CoN4 and SCo6 by detailing the catalytic mechanism for the improved ORR performance. The as-fabricated Zn-air battery (ZAB) using CoSA-AC@SNC demonstrates impressive peak power density of 174.1 mW cm-2 and charge/discharge durability for 148 h. This work provides a facile synthesis route for dual-site catalysts and can be extended to the development of other efficient atomically dispersed metal-based electrocatalysts.

3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38955341

ABSTRACT

Ab-initio crystal structure searches have played a pivotal role in recent discovery of high-Tc hydride superconductors under high pressure. Using evolutionary crystal searches, we predict novel ground state structures of N-doped LuH3 at ambient conditions. We find an insulating ground state structure for LuN0.125H2.875 (~1.0 wt.% N), contrary to earlier studies where assumed structures were all metallic. This insulating behavior of ground state was found to persist up to ~45 GPa. However our crystal structure search revealed a metallic state for an H-deficient variant of LuN0.125H2.875. We study bonding characteristics of important structures by calculating electronic density of states, electronic-localization functions and Bader charges. Our Bader charge analysis shows that insulators have both H+ and H- ions whereas metals have only H- ions. We find that H+ ions are bonded to N atoms via a very short covalent bond. Thus we identify a clear relationship between formation of N-H bonds and insulating behavior of materials. Besides this, we perform crystal structure searches for three more compositions with higher N-content (> 1.0 wt.%). Analysis of electronic properties shows that the ground states of these compositions are insulator.

4.
J Mol Model ; 30(8): 243, 2024 Jul 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38955842

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: This study investigates the impact of arsenic doping on the optical characteristics and electronic structure of zigzag (8, 0) and armchair (4, 4) gallium phosphide nanotubes using first-principles calculations based on the GaP1-xAsx system, where x = 0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, and 1. The electronic calculations showed that doping more arsenic atoms reduces the energy band gap for zigzag and armchair GaPAs nanotubes. PDOS analysis indicates that Ga-4p and P-3p orbitals play a significant role in determining the electronic properties of the GaP nanotube. The dominance of Ga-4p and P-3p orbitals in both the valence and conduction bands indicates their importance across the energy spectrum of the material. The complex dielectric function and absorption coefficient of zigzag and armchair GaP1-xAsx nanotubes are calculated for incident radiation with energies ranging from 1 to 6.2 eV. Optical results revealed that both zigzag and armchair GaPNTs exhibit strong absorption in the UV-visible regions due to electronic transitions between different Van Hove singularities. Also, due to quantum confinement effects, pure zigzag gallium phosphide nanotube exhibited two absorption edges at wavelengths (273 and 375 nm). These edges stand from the energy level's quantization in the nanotube construction, affecting the absorption characteristics. Substitutional doping by arsenic atoms changes the absorption edge to the long wavelengths due to decreased bandgap energy. Investigating electronic structures and optical properties of nanotubes proposes several advantages, such as understanding the doping effects on the nanotube structure and contributing to the direction of the experimental studies. These computational studies play a key role in developing the applications of nanomaterials. METHODS: Calculations of density functional theory (DFT) are achieved via the SIESTA package. SIESTA is a powerful and effective tool for executing DFT calculations on a large system of atoms. It generates numerous output files covering detailed information about the electronic structure, optical properties, total energy, optimized geometry, and other computed properties. The generalized gradient approximation GGA with Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof PBE functional was used. A vacuum region of 10 A0 was applied to avoid the interactions of adjacent nanotubes.

5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38986476

ABSTRACT

The K0.5Na0.5NbO3(KNN) system has emerged as one of the most promising lead-free piezoelectric over the years. In this work, we perform a comprehensive investigation of electronic structure, lattice dynamics and dielectric properties of room temperature phase of KNN by combining ab-initio DFT based theoretical analysis and experimental characterization. We assign the symmetry labels to KNN vibrational modes and obtain ab-initio polarized Raman spectra, Infrared (IR) reflectivity, Born-effective charge tensors, oscillator strengths etc. The KNN ceramic samples are prepared using conventional solid-state method and Raman and UV-Vis diffuse reflectance spectra are obtained. The computed Raman spectrum is found to agree well with the experimental spectrum. In particular, the results suggest that the mode in range ~840-870 cm-1 reported in the experimental studies is longitudinal optical (LO) with A_1 symmetry. The Raman mode intensities are calculated for different light polarization set-ups that suggests the observation of different symmetry modes in different polarization set-ups. The electronic structure of KNN is investigated and optical absorption spectrum is obtained. Further, the performances of DFT semi-local, meta-GGA and hybrid exchange-correlations (XC) functionals, in the estimation of KNN band gaps are investigated. The KNN bandgap computed using GGA-1/2 and HSE06 hybrid functional schemes are found to be in excellent agreement with the experimental value. The COHP, electron localization function and Bader charge analysis is also performed to deduce the nature of chemical bonding in the KNN. Overall, our study provides several bench-mark important results on KNN that have not been reported so far.

6.
Small ; : e2402402, 2024 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38949051

ABSTRACT

Doping transition metal oxide spinels with metal ions represents a significant strategy for optimizing the electronic structure of electrocatalysts. Herein, a bimetallic Fe and Ru doping strategy to fine-tune the crystal structure of CoV2O4 spinel for highly enhanced oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is presented performance. The incorporation of Fe and Ru is observed at octahedral sites within the CoV2O4 structure, effectively modulating the electronic configuration of Co. Density functional theory calculations have confirmed that Fe acts as a novel reactive site, replacing V. Additionally, the synergistic effect of Fe, Co, and Ru effectively optimizes the Gibbs free energy of the intermediate species, reduces the reaction energy barrier, and accelerates the kinetics toward OER. As expected, the best-performing CoVFe0.5Ru0.5O4 displays a low overpotential of 240 mV (@10 mA cm-2) and a remarkably low Tafel slope of 38.9 mV dec-1, surpassing that of commercial RuO2. Moreover, it demonstrates outstanding long-term durability lasting for 72 h. This study provides valuable insights for the design of highly active polymetallic spinel electrocatalysts for energy conversion applications.

7.
J Mol Model ; 30(8): 259, 2024 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38977581

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: This study explores the impact of deformation on the electrical and optical characteristics of monolayer cadmium telluride (MoTe2) with vacancies, using the foundational principles of density functional theory. It was discovered that both strain and imperfections alter the electrical characteristics of monolayer MoTe2. Under VTe-MoTe2, a direct-to-indirect band-gap transition occurs. In DTe-MoTe2, the band-gap value reduces dramatically, the conduction band changes downward, and the carrier concentration rises. The DVTe-induced band gap state is closer to the Fermi energy level than the VTe-induced band gap state. In this paper, DTe-MoTe2 is chosen for tensile deformation. The results show that the band-gap value tends to decrease by increasing tensile deformation. When the stretching value reaches 10%, the lower bound of the conduction band and the top of the valence band overlap, and the system is converted from a semiconductor to a metal. Considering the density of states, the missing state MoTe2 is mainly contributed by the participation of Te-s, Te-p, and Mo-d orbitals. In terms of optical qualities, the absorption and reflection peaks are red-shifted and blue-shifted, respectively. It is hoped that these effects on the optoelectronic properties will be widely applied. METHODS: In this study, we utilize the generalized gradient approximation plane-wave pseudopotential method, incorporating Perdew-Burke Ernzerhof (PBE) generalized functions and following the fundamental principles of the density functional theory framework. A 3 × 3 × 1 supercell was constructed as an undoped model based on a MoTe2 monolayer, which consists of 9 Mo atoms and 18 Te atoms. The vacuum flat plate was set to 15 Å along the z-direction to avoid interactions between the monolayers. For electronic structure calculations, the energy cutoff was set to 450 eV. Each model's computational process and structural optimization were carried out using the Monkhorst-Pack specialized K-point sampling approach. Crystal optimization computations used a 3 × 3 × 1 Monkhorst-Pack K-point grid for molybdenum ditelluride monolayers and a 9 × 9 × 1 K-point grid for electronic system analysis, analyzing state density and optical characteristics, respectively. For the structural optimization, the convergence requirements for maximum force, maximum atom displacement, maximum stress, and energy change were defined at 0.03 eV/Å, 0.001 Å, 0.05 Gpa, and 1.0 × 10-5 eV/atom, respectively.

8.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202410832, 2024 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38975967

ABSTRACT

Atomically precise supported nanocluster catalysts (APSNCs), which feature exact atomic composition, well-defined structures, and unique catalytic properties, offer an exceptional platform for understanding the structure-performance relationship at the atomic level. However, fabricating APSNCs with precisely controlled and uniform metal atom numbers, as well as maintaining a stable structure, remains a significant challenge due to uncontrollable dispersion and easy aggregation during synthetic and catalytic processes. Herein, we developed an effective ligand engineering strategy to construct a Pt6 nanocluster catalyst stabilized on oxidized carbon nanotubes (Pt6/OCNT). The structural analysis revealed that Pt6 nanoclusters in Pt6/OCNT were fully exposed and exhibited a planar structure. Furthermore, the obtained Pt6/OCNT exhibited outstanding acidic HOR performances with a high mass activity of 18.37 A·mgpt-1 along with excellent stability during a 24 h constant operation and good CO tolerance, surpassing those of the commercial Pt/C. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations demonstrated that the unique geometric and electronic structures of Pt6 nanoclusters on OCNT altered the hydrogen adsorption energies on catalytic sites and thus lowered the HOR theoretical overpotential. This work presents a new prospect for designing and synthesizing advanced APSNCs for efficient energy electrocatalysis.

9.
Water Res ; 261: 122020, 2024 Jun 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38971079

ABSTRACT

The transition metals redox rate limitations of spinel oxides during Fenton-like reactions hinder its efficient and sustainable treatment of actual wastewater. Herein, we propose to optimize the electronic structure of Co-Mn spinel oxide (CM) via sulfur doping and carbon matrix anchoring synergistically, enhancing the radicals-nonradicals Fenton-like processes for efficient water decontamination. Activating peroxymonosulfate (PMS) with optimised spinel oxide (CMSAC) achieved near-complete removal of ofloxacin (10 mg/L) within 6 min, showing 8.4 times higher efficiency than CM group. Significantly higher yields of SO4·- and high-valent metal species in CMSAC/PMS system provided exceptional resistance to co-existing anions, enabling efficient removal of various emerging contaminants in high salinity leachate. Specifically, sulfur coordination and carbon anchoring-induced oxygen vacancy synergistically improved the electronic structure and electron transfer efficiency of CMSAC, thus forming highly reactive Co sites and significantly reducing the energy barrier for Co(IV)=O generation. The reductive sulfur species facilitated the conversion of Co(III) to Co(II), thereby maintaining the stability of the catalytic activity of CMSAC. This work developed a synergistic optimization strategy to overcome the metals redox rate limitations of spinel oxides in Fenton-like reactions, providing deep mechanistic insights for designing Fenton-like catalysts suitable for practical applications.

10.
J Mol Model ; 30(8): 265, 2024 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39008190

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Geometrical knots are rare structural arrangements in proteins in which the polypeptide chain ties itself into a knot, which is very intriguing due to the uncertainty of their impact on the protein properties. Presently, classical molecular dynamics is the most employed technique in the few studies found on this topic, so any information on how the presence of knots affects the reactivity and electronic properties of proteins is even scarcer. Using the electronic structure methods and quantum chemical descriptors analysis, we found that the same amino-acid residues in the knot core have statistically larger values for the unknotted protein, for both hard-hard and soft-soft interaction descriptors. In addition, we present a computationally feasible protocol, where we show it is possible to separate the contribution of the geometrical knot to the reactivity and other electronic structure properties. METHODS: In order to investigate these systems, we used PRIMoRDiA, a new software developed by our research group, to explore the electronic structure of biological macromolecules. We evaluated several local quantum chemical descriptors to unveil relevant patterns potentially originating from the presence of the geometrical knot in two proteins, belonging to the ornithine transcarbamylase family. We compared several sampled structures from these two enzymes that are highly similar in both tertiary structure and function, but one of them has a knot whereas the other does not. The sampling was carried out through molecular dynamics simulations using ff14SB force field along 50 ns, and the semiempirical convergence was performed with PM7 Hamiltonian.


Subject(s)
Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase , Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase/chemistry , Ornithine Carbamoyltransferase/metabolism , Protein Conformation , Models, Molecular
11.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 675: 1021-1031, 2024 Jul 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39003815

ABSTRACT

Development of non-noble metal-based electrocatalysts to enhance the performance of zinc-air batteries (ZABs) is of great significance, but it remains a formidable challenge due to their poor stability and activity. Herein, a bifunctional CuNi-TiOx/NCNFS electrocatalyst, featuring with electron-rich copper-nickel (CuNi) alloy nanoparticles anchored on titanium oxide/N-doped carbon nanofibers (TiOx/NCNFS), is constructed by a dual-substrate loading strategy. The introduction of TiOx has led to a significant increase in the stability of the dual-substrate. The strong electronic interaction between CuNi and TiOx strengthens the anchoring of active metal sites, thus accelerating the electron transfer. Theoretical calculations unclose that NCNFS can regulate the charge distribution of TiOx, inducing the charge transfer from NCNFS â†’ TiOx â†’ CuNi, thereby reducing the d-band center of Cu and Ni, which is beneficial to the desorption of intermediate oxide species of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) and oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Therefore, CuNi-TiOx/NCNFS delivers a remarkable bifunctional performance with a low OER overpotential of 258 mV at 10 mA cm-2 and an ORR half-wave potential of 0.85  V. When assembled into ZABs, CuNi-TiOx/NCNFS shows a low potential gap of 0.64 V, a higher power density of 149.6 mW cm-2 at 330 mA cm-2, and an outstanding stability for 250 h at 5mA cm-2. This study provides a novel approach by constructing dual-substrate to tune the electronic structure of active metal sites for efficient rechargeable ZABs.

12.
Natl Sci Rev ; 11(8): nwae194, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39007006

ABSTRACT

Superconducting infinite-layer (IL) nickelates offer a new platform for investigating the long-standing problem of high-temperature superconductivity. Many models were proposed to understand the superconducting mechanism of nickelates based on the calculated electronic structure, and the multiple Fermi surfaces and multiple orbitals involved create complications and controversial conclusions. Over the past five years, the lack of direct measurements of the electronic structure has hindered the understanding of nickelate superconductors. Here we fill this gap by directly resolving the electronic structures of the parent compound LaNiO2 and superconducting La0.8Ca0.2NiO2 using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. We find that their Fermi surfaces consist of a quasi-2D hole pocket and a 3D electron pocket at the Brillouin zone corner, whose volumes change upon Ca doping. The Fermi surface topology and band dispersion of the hole pocket closely resemble those observed in hole-doped cuprates. However, the cuprate-like band exhibits significantly higher hole doping in superconducting La0.8Ca0.2NiO2 compared to superconducting cuprates, highlighting the disparities in the electronic states of the superconducting phase. Our observations highlight the novel aspects of the IL nickelates, and pave the way toward the microscopic understanding of the IL nickelate family and its superconductivity.

13.
J Mol Model ; 30(8): 269, 2024 Jul 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39012379

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Constrained methods in electronic structure methodologies add terms to the variational equations and generate solutions that represent distorted electronic distributions. In some cases, the new solutions can be used to study the chemical reactivity of parts of the molecule. Additionally, this contribution presents the use of population constraints to define pseudo atoms in a molecule. The effects of the pseudo atom on the molecular properties are analyzed. The pseudo atoms are used to simulate the inductive effect of the substituent in a group of carbonyl molecules and their effect on the stability of the complexes between these organic species and one molecule of water. A discussion on the assumptions involved in the present definition of pseudo atoms is also included. METHOD: The constrained RHF computations are done in a modified Hartree-Fock code for Gaussian basis sets. The selected basis set is STO-6 G.

14.
J Mol Model ; 30(8): 271, 2024 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39017741

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Density functional theory (DFT) calculations on the ground and the first excited state are performed on the modified and unmodified 4-(methoxyphenyl acetonitrile) monomer (referred to as MPA). The modified monomer named MFA is obtained by Knoevenagel condensation of MPA with dimethylformamide dimethyl acetal (DMF-DMA). DFT computations show that the chemical grafting of the dimethylamino group onto the MPA unit induces a great change in the geometric, electronic, and optical properties. Going from MPA to MFA monomer, a great change in the frontier orbitals of the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) in the ground and the first excited state is observed. Consequently, a reduction in the energy gap HOMO-LUMO and an enhancement in the absorption and emission properties are observed under the chemical modification. The observed modifications in the electronics and optical properties are the result of the charge transfer appearing between the cyano (C≡N) acceptor group and the dimethylamino (DMF-DMA)-grafted group donor ring. METHODS: Quantum chemical calculations were performed in the ground and the first excited state using the density functional theory (DFT), and it extends the time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT), implemented in the Gaussian 09 software package. The ground state is obtained by optimization of the studied molecular geometries by employing the DFT/M062X/6-31G(d,p) level of theory. The first excited state is obtained by re-optimization of the ground state geometries using the TD-DFT/M062X/6-31G(d,p) level of theory. The contour plots of the frontier orbitals and the molecular electrostatic potential (MEP) maps are obtained from the ground and the first excited state, optimized geometries, and drawn using Gaussview software.

15.
J Mol Model ; 30(8): 270, 2024 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39014125

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: In the renewable industry, pressure-dependent CsPbBr3 perovskite has a lot of potential due to its exceptional properties. Present work revealed the mechanical stability of CsPbBr3 between 0 to 50 GPa. The bandgap of unstressed CsPbBr3 is 2.90 eV, indicating a direct bandgap. Band gap values decrease by increasing external pressure. CsPbBr3 structure showed a direct band gap from 0 to 35 GPa and in-direct from 40 to 50 GPa. The unit cell volume and lattice constants are substantially decreased. Mechanical parameters, i.e., Young's modulus, bulk modulus, anisotropy factor, shear modulus, and poison's ratio are obtained. Under ambient conditions, the mechanical properties of CsPbBr3 showed ductile behavior and with induced pressure, their ductility has significantly improved. By applying stresses ranging from 0 to 50 GPa, the considerable fluctuation in values of dielectric function (imaginary and real), absorption, reflectivity, loss function, refractive index (imaginary and real), and conductivity (imaginary and real), was also identified. When pressure rises, the optical parameters increase and drag in the direction of high energies. Response functions are used to predict the density of states and the phonon lattice dispersion to study the phonon properties. By using the quasi-harmonic Debye model, the thermal effect on the free energy, entropy, enthalpy, and heat capacity were predicted and compared. These results would be useful for theoretical research and indicate how external pressure significantly affects the physical characteristics of CsPbBr3 perovskites, which may open up new possibilities for use in optoelectronic, photonic, and solar cell applications. METHODS: The structural, electrical, mechanical, optical, and thermal properties of cesium lead bromide (CsPbBr3) are investigated by applying external pressure from 0 to 50 GPa, using generalized gradient approximations (GGA) and Perdew-Burke-Ernzerhof (PBE) with CASTEP code built-in material studio by density functional theory (DFT).

16.
Chemistry ; : e202401710, 2024 Jun 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38845405

ABSTRACT

A series of homoleptic Ni bis-1,1-dithiolates, [Ni(S2C2RR')2]2- (R = CN, R' = CN, CO2Et, CONH2, Ph, Ph-4-Cl, Ph-4-OMe, Ph-4-NO2, Ph-3-CF3, Ph-4-CF3, Ph-4-CN; R = NO2, R' = H; R = R' = CO2Et) have been synthesized from the reaction of the alkali metal salt of the ligand and nickel chloride, and isolated as tetraphenylphosphonium or tetrabutylammonium salts. The complexes were characterized by X-ray crystallography, high-resolution mass spectrometry, and infrared (IR), nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and electronic absorption spectroscopies. The molecular structures show a rigidly square planar Ni(II) center linking two four-membered chelate rings whose dimensions are constant across the series. The electronic effect of the ligand substituents are revealed in the 13C NMR and electronic spectra, and corroborated by density functional calculations. Electron withdrawing groups deshield the low-field CS2 resonance, and the signature charge transfer band in the visible region is red-shifted. These observables have been accurately reproduced computationally, and revealed the Ni contribution to the ground state diminishes with decreasing electron withdrawing capacity of the ligand substituents. In contrast to 1,2-dithiolates, the redox inactivity afforded by 1,1-dithiolates stems from the smaller chelate ring and substantially reduced sulfur content that is key to stabilizing the radical form.

17.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 673: 909-921, 2024 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38909490

ABSTRACT

Electrocatalysts with appropriate electron coupling toward LiO2 intermediates can exhibit superior oxygen reduction/evolution reaction kinetics in Li-O2 batteries (LOBs). In this work, a charge redistribution strategy has been developed by constructing NiS/MoS2 heterostructure nanosheet self-assembled hollow microspheres with an internal electric field to regulate the interaction with LiO2 and then improve the electrochemical performance of LOBs. Density functional theory calculations and physicochemical characterizations reveal that the difference of work functions between NiS and MoS2 promotes the electron redistribution in heterointerface via built-in electrical field, leading to increased electron density of interfacial Ni atom, thereby enhancing its electron coupling toward LiO2 intermediates and promoting one-electron oxygen reduction/oxidation reaction kinetics. As a result, the NiS/MoS2-based LOBs exhibit evidently higher discharge capacity and much better cycling performance than the batteries using NiS and MoS2. This work provides a reliable charge redistribution strategy induced by build-in electric field to design efficient catalysts for LOBs.

18.
Chemistry ; : e202400755, 2024 Jun 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38860741

ABSTRACT

Historically, cerium has been attractive for pharmaceutical and industrial applications. The cerium atom has the unique ability to cycle between two chemical states (Ce(III) and Ce(IV)) and drastically adjust its electronic configuration: [Xe] 4f1 5d1 6s2 in response to a chemical reaction. Understanding how electrons drive chemical reactions is an important topic. The most direct way of probing the chemical and electronic structure of materials is by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) or X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) in high energy resolution fluorescence detection (HERFD) mode. Such measurements at the Ce L3 edge have the advantage of a high penetration depth, enabling in-situ reaction studies in a time-resolved manner and investigation of material production or material performance under specific conditions. But how much do we understand Ce L3 XANES? This article provides an overview of the information that can be extracted from experimental Ce L3 XAS/XANES/HERFD data. A collection of XANES data recorded on various cerium systems in HERFD mode is presented here together with detailed discussions on data analysis and the current status of spectral interpretation, including electronic structure calculations.

19.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202409449, 2024 Jun 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38864513

ABSTRACT

The development of readily accessible and interpretable descriptors is pivotal yet challenging in the rational design of metal-organic framework (MOF) catalysts. This study presents a straightforward and physically interpretable activity descriptor for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), derived from a dataset of bimetallic Ni-based MOFs. Through an artificial-intelligence (AI) data-mining subgroup discovery (SGD) approach, a combination of the d-band center and number of missing electrons in eg states of Ni, as well as the first ionization energy and number of electrons in eg states of the substituents, is revealed as a gene of a superior OER catalyst. The found descriptor, obtained from the AI analysis of a dataset of MOFs containing 3-5d transition metals and 13 organic linkers, has been demonstrated to facilitate in-depth understanding of structure-activity relationship at the molecular orbital level. The descriptor is validated experimentally for 11 Ni-based MOFs. Combining SGD with physical insights and experimental verification, our work offers a highly efficient approach for screening MOF-based OER catalysts, simultaneously providing comprehensive understanding of the catalytic mechanism.

20.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; : e2401595, 2024 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38868906

ABSTRACT

The 2-bit Lindqvist-type polyoxometalate (POM) [V6O13((OCH2)3CCH2N3)2]2- with a diamagnetic {V6O19} core and azide termini shows six fully oxidized VV centers in solution as well as the solid state, according to 51V NMR spectroscopy. Under UV irradiation, it exhibits reversible switching between its ground S0 state and the energetically higher lying states in acetonitrile and water solutions. TD-DFT calculations demonstrate that this process is mainly initialized by excitation from the S0 to S9 state. Pulse radiolysis transient absorption spectroscopy experiments with a solvated electron point out photochemically induced charge disproportionation of VV into VIV and electron communication between the POM molecules via their excited states. The existence of this unique POM-to-POM electron communication is also indicated by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) studies on gold-metalized silicon wafers (Au//SiO2//Si) under ambient conditions. The amount of reduced vanadium centers in the "confined" environment increases substantially after beam irradiation with soft X-rays compared to non-irradiated samples. The excited state of one POM anion seems to give rise to subsequent electron transfer from another POM anion. However, this reaction is prohibited as soon as the relaxed T1 state of the POM is reached.

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