Hassan Javed, Kees Kolmeijer, Nick Klein, Jamie A. Trindell, Gregory Schneider, Rik V. Mom
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
During electrocatalytic reactions, the electrode, adsorbates, electrolyte ions, and solvent molecules at the electrode-electrolyte interface each play an important role. Electrochemical X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) holds great promise for deciphering these roles, providing the oxidation state or bonding environment of every element present at the interface. However, combining the vacuum required for XPS with the wet environment needed for electrochemistry constitutes a technical challenge, requiring purpose-built instrumentation and spectro-electrochemical cell design. Here, we present a laboratory-based electrochemical XPS instrument optimized for operando studies on nano-structured electrocatalysts. The core of the system is a 3D printed spectro-electrochemical cell containing a membrane-electrode-graphene assembly. We show that this design enables us to probe the electrode surface, interfacial water, and interfacial ions under well-defined potential control. Meanwhile, the introduction of a mesoporous membrane into the assembly enables the transport of any molecular or ionic reactant towards the working electrode, opening the way to study any aqueous phase electrocatalytic system using laboratory-based electrochemical XPS. We exemplify this for the oxygen reduction reaction.
期刊介绍:
Vacuum is an international rapid publications journal with a focus on short communication. All papers are peer-reviewed, with the review process for short communication geared towards very fast turnaround times. The journal also published full research papers, thematic issues and selected papers from leading conferences.
A report in Vacuum should represent a major advance in an area that involves a controlled environment at pressures of one atmosphere or below.
The scope of the journal includes:
1. Vacuum; original developments in vacuum pumping and instrumentation, vacuum measurement, vacuum gas dynamics, gas-surface interactions, surface treatment for UHV applications and low outgassing, vacuum melting, sintering, and vacuum metrology. Technology and solutions for large-scale facilities (e.g., particle accelerators and fusion devices). New instrumentation ( e.g., detectors and electron microscopes).
2. Plasma science; advances in PVD, CVD, plasma-assisted CVD, ion sources, deposition processes and analysis.
3. Surface science; surface engineering, surface chemistry, surface analysis, crystal growth, ion-surface interactions and etching, nanometer-scale processing, surface modification.
4. Materials science; novel functional or structural materials. Metals, ceramics, and polymers. Experiments, simulations, and modelling for understanding structure-property relationships. Thin films and coatings. Nanostructures and ion implantation.