Date:
-
Location:
CP179
Speaker(s) / Presenter(s):
Seo-Hyoung Chang (Argonne National Laboratory)
Functional oxides and their interfaces offer new opportunities to overcome the
current limits of energy storage and conversion systems, e.g., water dissociation
and formation. However, the understanding of complex oxide interfaces and
their electrochemical properties is far from complete, particularly with regard to
electronic and ionic dynamics occurring in aqueous solutions or ionic liquids under
applied electric fields. To elucidate the physical and electrocatalytic properties
of oxide surfaces and interfaces, it is necessary to build a model system and to
employ in situ experimental tools to detect and analyze the complex time-dependent
phenomena. In this talk, I will introduce recent in situ synchrotron studies [1,2]
conducted at Argonne National Laboratory that combine structural, spectroscopic,
and electrochemical characterization on model systems, e.g., epitaxial perovskite
or layered oxide thin films. With this methodology, we can determine both the
reactivity and stability of active sites on complex oxide surfaces during water
dissociation and formation. This approach offers much needed insight into the
electrocatalytic properties of oxide interfaces and provides new strategies for the
creation of new stable and active energy materials designed at the atomic level.
[1] S. H. Chang et al., ACS Nano 8, 1584 (2014).
[2] S. H. Chang et al., Nature Commun. 5, 4191 (2014).
Event Series: