Publications by authors named "Ivelina Zaharieva"

Article Synopsis
  • * A novel method using single-energy X-ray absorption spectroscopy is proposed to monitor these oxidation-state changes in real-time during OER, aiming for better catalyst performance and longevity.
  • * The study details the calibration process for obtaining accurate oxidation state data and showcases the utility of combining X-ray spectroscopy with electrochemical techniques to enhance the understanding of redox kinetics in catalyst systems.
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An unprecedented molecular 2Fe-2As precursor complex was synthesized and transformed under soft reaction conditions to produce an active and long-term stable nanocrystalline FeAs material for electrocatalytic water oxidation in alkaline media. The 2Fe2As-centred β-diketiminato complex, having an unusual planar FeAs core structure, results from the salt-metathesis reaction of the corresponding β-diketiminato FeCl complex and the AsCO (arsaethynolate) anion as the monoanionic As source. The as-prepared FeAs phase produced from the precursor has been electrophoretically deposited on conductive electrode substrates and shown to act as a electro(pre)catalyst for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER).

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Transition metal oxides are of high interest in both energy storage (batteries) and production of non-fossil fuels by (photo)electrocatalysis. Their functionally crucial charge (oxidation state) changes and electrocatalytic properties are best investigated under electrochemical operation conditions. We established operando Raman spectroscopy for investigation of the atomic structure and oxidation state of a non-crystalline, hydrated, and phosphate-containing Co oxide material (CoCat), which is an electrocatalyst for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) at neutral pH and is structurally similar to LiCoO of batteries.

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One of the key catalytic reactions for life on earth, the oxidation of water to molecular oxygen, occurs in the oxygen-evolving complex of the photosystem II (PSII) mediated by a manganese-containing cluster. Considerable efforts in this research area embrace the development of efficient artificial manganese-based catalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). Using artificial OER catalysts for selective oxygenation of organic substrates to produce value-added chemicals is a worthwhile objective.

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Water oxidation and concomitant dioxygen formation by the manganese-calcium cluster of oxygenic photosynthesis has shaped the biosphere, atmosphere, and geosphere. It has been hypothesized that at an early stage of evolution, before photosynthetic water oxidation became prominent, light-driven formation of manganese oxides from dissolved Mn(2+) ions may have played a key role in bioenergetics and possibly facilitated early geological manganese deposits. Here we report the biochemical evidence for the ability of photosystems to form extended manganese oxide particles.

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Herein, we report the synthesis, characterization, crystal structure, density functional theory calculations, and water-oxidizing activity of a pivalate Mn-Ca cluster. All of the manganese atoms in the cluster are Mn(iv) ions and have a distorted MnO6 octahedral geometry. Three Mn(iv) ions together with a Ca(ii) ion and four-oxido groups form a cubic Mn3CaO4 unit which is similar to the Mn3CaO4 cluster in the water-oxidizing complex of Photosystem II.

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Information on binding and rearrangement of pivotal water molecules could support understanding of light-driven water oxidation at the catalytic MnCaO cluster of photosystem II (PSII). To address this point, the binding of ammonia (NH)-a possible substrate-water analogue-has been investigated and discussed in the context of putative reaction mechanisms. By time-resolved detection of O formation after light-flash excitation, we discriminate three NH/NH binding sites jointly characterized by a K value around 25 mM (of NH), but differing in their influence on the O-formation step.

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Understanding energetic and kinetic parameters of intermediates formed in the course of the reaction cycle (-state cycle) of photosynthetic water oxidation is of high interest and could support the rationale designs of artificial systems for solar fuels. We use time-resolved measurements of the delayed chlorophyll fluorescence to estimate rate constants, activation energies, free energy differences, and to discriminate between the enthalpic and the entropic contributions to the decrease of the Gibbs free energy of the individual transitions. Using a joint-fit simulation approach, kinetic parameters are determined for the reaction intermediates in the -state transitions in buffers with different pH in HO and in DO.

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Facile electromodification of metallic NiFe alloys leads to a series of NiFe oxyhydroxide surface films with excellent electrocatalytic performance in alkaline water oxidation. During cyclic voltammetry and after sudden potential jumps between noncatalytic and catalytic potentials, Ni oxidation/reduction was tracked with millisecond time resolution by a UV/Vis reflectance signal. Optimal catalysis at intermediate Ni/Fe ratios is explained by two opposing trends for increasing Fe content: a) pronounced slowdown of the Ni /Ni oxidation step and b) increased reactivity of the most oxidized catalyst state detectable at catalytic potentials.

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Understanding the mechanism for electrochemical water oxidation is important for the development of more efficient catalysts for artificial photosynthesis. A basic step is the proton-coupled electron transfer, which enables accumulation of oxidizing equivalents without buildup of a charge. We find that substituting deuterium for hydrogen resulted in an 87% decrease in the catalytic activity for water oxidation on Co-based amorphous-oxide catalysts at neutral pH, while O-to-O substitution lead to a 10% decrease.

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Article Synopsis
  • The manganese-calcium catalyst in photosystem II is essential for efficient light-driven water oxidation, producing oxygen.
  • Recent studies reveal conflicting crystal structures of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC), showing either a vacant manganese site or a bound peroxide.
  • Analysis of Mn Kα X-ray emission spectra suggests Mn oxidation occurs in three transitions and implies that more water molecules bind at a previously open manganese site, contradicting the notion of manganese reduction and the likelihood of peroxide formation.
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The identity and rearrangements of substrate water molecules in photosystem II (PSII) water oxidation are of great mechanistic interest and addressed herein by comprehensive analysis of NH/NH binding. Time-resolved detection of O formation and recombination fluorescence as well as Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) difference spectroscopy on plant PSII membrane particles reveals the following. (1) Partial inhibition in NHCl buffer occurs with a pH-independent binding constant of ∼25 mM, which does not result from decelerated O formation, but from complete blockage of a major PSII fraction (∼60%) after reaching the Mn(IV) (S) state.

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The choreography of electron transfer (ET) and proton transfer (PT) in the S-state cycle at the manganese-calcium (MnCa) complex of photosystem II (PSII) is pivotal for the mechanism of photosynthetic water oxidation. Time-resolved room-temperature X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the Mn K-edge was employed to determine the kinetic isotope effect (KIE = τ/τ) of the four S transitions in a PSII membrane particle preparation in HO and DO buffers. We found a small KIE (1.

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Structural data of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in photosystem II (PSII) determined by X-ray crystallography, quantum chemistry (QC), and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) analyses are presently inconsistent. Therefore, a detailed study of what information can be gained about the OEC through a comparison of QC and crystallographic structure information combined with the information from range-extended EXAFS spectra was undertaken. An analysis for determining the precision of the atomic coordinates of the OEC by QC is carried out.

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Herein, we investigate the effect of post-treatment of nanolayered manganese oxide by different inorganic and organic compounds. We use the fact that nanolayered manganese oxides are among the strongest naturally occurring oxidants, capable of oxidizing a wide range of organic molecules. Post-treatment of the synthetic Mn oxides with oxidizable compounds increases the cerium(IV)-driven water oxidation catalyzed by treated layered manganese oxides more than 25 times.

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In oxygenic photosynthesis, water is oxidized and dioxygen is produced at a Mn4Ca complex bound to the proteins of photosystem II (PSII). Valence and coordination changes in its catalytic S-state cycle are of great interest. In room-temperature (in situ) experiments, time-resolved energy-sampling X-ray emission spectroscopy of the Mn Kβ1,3 line after laser-flash excitation of PSII membrane particles was applied to characterize the redox transitions in the S-state cycle.

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Water-oxidizing calcium-manganese oxides, which mimic the inorganic core of the biological catalyst, were synthesized and structurally characterized by X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the manganese and calcium K edges. The amorphous, birnesite-type oxides are obtained through a simple protocol that involves electrodeposition followed by active-site creation through annealing at moderate temperatures. Calcium ions are inessential, but tune the electrocatalytic properties.

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Amorphous transition-metal (hydr)oxides are considered as the most promising catalysts that promote the oxidation of water to molecular oxygen, protons, and "energized" electrons, and, in turn, as fundamental parts of "artificial leaves" that can be exploited for large scale generation of chemical fuels (e.g., hydrogen) directly from sunlight.

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Efficient electrochemical water splitting to hydrogen and oxygen is considered a promising technology to overcome our dependency on fossil fuels. Searching for novel catalytic materials for electrochemical oxygen generation is essential for improving the total efficiency of water splitting processes. We report the synthesis, structural characterization, and electrochemical performance in the oxygen evolution reaction of Fe-doped NiO nanocrystals.

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Is water oxidation catalyzed at the surface or within the bulk volume of solid oxide materials? This question is addressed for cobalt phosphate catalysts deposited on inert electrodes, namely crystallites of pakhomovskyite (Co3(PO4)2⋅8 H2O, Pak) and phosphate-containing Co oxide (CoCat). X-ray spectroscopy reveals that oxidizing potentials transform the crystalline Pak slowly (5-8 h) but completely into the amorphous CoCat. Electrochemical analysis supports high-TOF surface activity in Pak, whereas its amorphization results in dominating volume activity of the thereby formed CoCat material.

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A mild screen-printing method was developed to coat conductive oxide surfaces (here: fluorine-doped tin oxide) with micrometer-thick layers of presynthesized calcium manganese oxide (Ca-birnessite) particles. After optimization steps concerning the printing process and layer thickness, electrodes were obtained that could be used as corrosion-stable water-oxidizing anodes at pH 7 to yield current densities of 1 mA cm(-2) at an overpotential of less than 500 mV. Analyses of the electrode coatings of optimal thickness (≈10 μm) indicated that composition, oxide phase, and morphology of the synthetic Ca-birnessite particles were hardly affected by the screen-printing procedure.

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A binuclear manganese molecular complex [(OH2)(terpy)Mn(μ-O)2Mn(terpy)(OH2)](3+) (1) is the most prominent structural and functional model of the water-oxidizing Mn complex operating in plants and cyanobacteria. Supported on montmorillonite clay and using Ce(IV) as a chemical oxidant, 1 has been reported to be one of the best Mn-based molecular catalysts toward water oxidation. By X-ray absorption spectroscopy and kinetic analysis of the oxygen evolution reaction, we show that [(OH2)(terpy)Mn(μ-O)2Mn(terpy)(OH2)](3+) is transformed into layered type Mn-oxide particles which are the actual water oxidation catalyst.

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Two types of manganese oxides have been prepared by hydrolysis of tetranuclear Mn(iii) complexes in the presence or absence of phosphate ions. The oxides have been characterized structurally using X-ray absorption spectroscopy and functionally by O2 evolution measurements. The structures of the oxides prepared in the absence of phosphate are dominated by di-μ-oxo bridged manganese ions that form layers with limited long-range order, consisting of edge-sharing MnO6 octahedra.

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Water oxidation in the neutral pH regime catalyzed by amorphous transition-metal oxides is of high interest in energy science. Crucial determinants of electrocatalytic activity were investigated for a cobalt-based oxide film electrodeposited at various thicknesses on inert electrodes. For water oxidation at low current densities, the turnover frequency (TOF) per cobalt ion of the bulk material stayed fully constant for variation of the thickness of the oxide film by a factor of 100 (from about 15 nm to 1.

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