This illustration depicts a new system developed at SLAC and Stanford University that anchors individual iridium atoms to the surface of a catalyst, increasing its efficiency at splitting water to record levels. Each eight-sided support structure, shaded in blue, contains a single iridium atom (large blue spheres). The iridium atoms grab passing water molecules (floating above and to the left of them), and encourage them to react with each other, releasing oxygen molecules (above and to the right). Image: Greg Stewart/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
This illustration depicts a new system developed at SLAC and Stanford University that anchors individual iridium atoms to the surface of a catalyst, increasing its efficiency at splitting water to record levels. Each eight-sided support structure, shaded in blue, contains a single iridium atom (large blue spheres). The iridium atoms grab passing water molecules (floating above and to the left of them), and encourage them to react with each other, releasing oxygen molecules (above and to the right). Image: Greg Stewart/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

A new way of anchoring individual iridium atoms to the surface of a catalyst increased its efficiency at splitting water molecules to record levels, report scientists from the US Department of Energy’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and Stanford University.

This represents the first time this approach had been applied to the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) – part of a process called electrolysis that uses electricity to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. If powered by renewable energy sources, electrolysis could produce fuels and chemical feedstocks more sustainably and reduce the use of fossil fuels. But the sluggish pace of OER has been a bottleneck to improving the efficiency of electrolysis so it can compete in the open market.

The results of this study could ease that bottleneck and open new avenues to observing and understanding how single-atom catalytic centers operate under realistic working conditions, the scientists said. They report their findings in a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Catalysts are the backbone of the chemical industry and hold promise for a sustainable energy future. Like matchmakers, catalysts grab molecules from a passing flow of liquid or gas and encourage them to react with each other, without being consumed themselves. To maximize the efficiency of this process, catalyst nanoparticles are typically scattered on the surface of a porous material that offers the largest possible surface area for many reactions to take place simultaneously.

But only the atoms on the outside of a nanoparticle can participate in catalysis; the inner ones go to waste. When the catalyst is a pricey precious metal like iridium or platinum, even a small amount of waste is expensive. So scientists have been working on using individual atoms of these precious metals.

Each atom is a catalytic reaction center, and their tiny size means a lot more of them can fit on the surface of a given support structure. This greatly increases the amount of active catalyst that’s exposed to the reactants and the number of reactions that can take place at once, boosting efficiency.

In this study, a team led by Yi Cui from SLAC and Stanford University and SLAC staff scientist Michal Bajdich developed a new way to anchor individual iridium atoms on a supporting surface. Stanford postdoctoral researchers Xueli Zheng and Jing Tang carried out the experiment, aided by a theoretical simulation of X-ray data from SLAC associate staff scientist Alessandro Gallo that revealed which configuration would be the most stable and effective.

To make the new catalyst, the scientists first made a porous structure to support the iridium atoms that would catalyze the reaction, and then exposed this foam-like structure to a solution containing iridium compounds. By quickly freezing this solution, they created a thin, iridium-rich layer of ice on the surface, and then conducted additional processing to create well-distributed sites where individual iridium atoms were snugly anchored on the supportive surface.

X-ray observations of the catalyst at work revealed that the iridium atoms were in a chemical state that makes them exceptionally effective at carrying out the part of the water-splitting reaction that releases oxygen. Other tests showed that this enhanced activity was due entirely to the fact that the iridium was in the form of single, isolated atoms, and not just to the large surface area on which they were embedded.

The resulting catalyst is better than most of the iridium-based catalysts known to date, the scientists reported. They also said this new atom-anchoring system provides an ideal model for probing and establishing the connection between catalysts and their support structures for a variety of electrocatalytic reactions.

This story is adapted from material from the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, with editorial changes made by Materials Today. The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent those of Elsevier. Link to original source.