Publications by authors named "Velasco-Velez J"

Batteries based on sulfur cathodes offer a promising energy storage solution due to their potential for high performance, cost-effectiveness, and sustainability. However, commercial viability is challenged by issues such as polysulfide migration, volume changes, uneven phase nucleation, limited ion transport, and sluggish sulfur redox kinetics. Addressing these challenges requires insights into the structural, morphological, and chemical evolution of phases, the associated volume changes and internal stresses, and ion and polysulfide diffusion within the battery.

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  • The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is crucial for generating green hydrogen and other renewable energy sources, with iridium oxohydroxides (IOHs) being effective catalysts due to their balance of activity and stability in acidic conditions.
  • While amorphous IOHs are highly active, they lack stability, whereas crystalline IOHs are more stable but typically less active.
  • This research identifies crystalline IrOOH nanosheets as a promising catalyst, offering high activity and stability, and establishes simple design rules based on atomic-level relationships to guide future development of efficient OER catalysts.
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X-ray irradiation can induce chemical reactions on surfaces. In X-ray spectroscopic experiments, such reactions may result in spectrum distortion and are termed radiation damage. In this study, we investigate the X-ray-induced chemical reaction at the partially oxidized copper surface in the settings of the dip-and-pull experiment, a method that generates liquid-solid interfaces for in situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) studies.

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  • Researchers are developing a new method for detecting trace gases in the air using ionization energies, which can be miniaturized and fine-tuned.
  • Traditional methods for identification rely on large equipment, like mass spectrometers, but this new approach uses electron impact ionization, generated via the photoelectric effect, for better sensitivity at a lower scale.
  • The method achieves sensitivity levels of 1 ppm, comparable to classic photoionization detection (PID), and can identify substances with an accuracy of 30 meV, supported by quantum mechanical models.
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  • Catalyst degradation and changes in product selectivity are significant challenges in electrochemical CO reduction on copper electrodes, which often go unaddressed.
  • The study utilizes advanced techniques like X-ray spectroscopy and electron microscopy to observe how the morphology, electronic structure, and product selectivity of copper nanosized crystals evolve during long-term CO reduction.
  • Findings indicate that while the electronic structure remains stable, the electrode's morphology shifts from faceted to rough/rounded over time, leading to increased current but a reduction in selectivity towards more valuable hydrocarbons, highlighting the importance of maintaining a faceted Cu structure for optimal performance.
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In the search for rational design strategies for oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalysts, linking the catalyst structure to activity and stability is key. However, highly active catalysts such as IrO and RuO undergo structural changes under OER conditions, and hence, structure-activity-stability relationships need to take into account the operando structure of the catalyst. Under the highly anodic conditions of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), electrocatalysts are often converted into an active form.

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Operando soft and hard X-ray spectroscopic techniques were used in combination with plane-wave density functional theory (DFT) simulations to rationalize the enhanced activities of Zn-containing Cu nanostructured electrocatalysts in the electrocatalytic CO hydrogenation reaction. We show that at a potential for CO hydrogenation, Zn is alloyed with Cu in the bulk of the nanoparticles with no metallic Zn segregated; at the interface, low reducible Cu(I)-O species are consumed. Additional spectroscopic features are observed, which are identified as various surface Cu(I) ligated species; these respond to the potential, revealing characteristic interfacial dynamics.

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The electrocatalytic conversion of CO to fuels and chemicals using renewable energy is a key decarbonization technology. From a technological viewpoint, the realization of such process in the gas phase and at room temperature is considered advantageous as it allows one to circumvent the limited CO solubility in liquid electrolytes and CO transport across the electrical double layer. Yet, electrocatalysts' performances reported so far are promising but not satisfactory.

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  • Photoelectron spectroscopy provides insights into the electronic structure and chemical composition of surfaces, but struggles with liquids needed for electrochemical processes, particularly in the soft X-ray range.
  • Our group has developed new methodologies to enhance surface information during electrochemical reactions, comparing their effectiveness to traditional techniques like total fluorescence yield detection.
  • Using resonant photoemission spectroscopy, we discovered that the oxygen evolution reaction on IrO catalysts is more complex than previously understood, revealing different active oxygen species and their roles in forming dioxygen, highlighting new research possibilities for solid-liquid interfaces in electrochemistry.
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Iridium and ruthenium and their oxides/hydroxides are the best candidates for the oxygen evolution reaction under harsh acidic conditions owing to the low overpotentials observed for Ru- and Ir-based anodes and the high corrosion resistance of Ir-oxides. Herein, by means of cutting edge surface and bulk sensitive X-ray spectroscopy techniques, specifically designed electrode nanofabrication and DFT calculations, we were able to reveal the electronic structure of the active IrO centers (i.e.

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The electrochemical transformation of biomass-derived compounds (e.g., aldehyde electroreduction to alcohols) is gaining increasing interest due to the sustainability of this process that can be exploited to produce value-added products from biowastes and renewable electricity.

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Electronic metal-support interactions (EMSI) describe the electron flow between metal sites and a metal oxide support. It is generally used to follow the mechanism of redox reactions. In this study of CuO-CeO redox, an additional flow of electrons from metallic Cu to surface carbon species is observed via a combination of operando X-ray absorption spectroscopy, synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction, near ambient pressure near edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy, and diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy.

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Revealing the active nature of oxide-derived copper is of key importance to understand its remarkable catalytic performance during the cathodic CO reduction reaction (CORR) to produce valuable hydrocarbons. Using advanced spectroscopy, electron microscopy, and electrochemically active surface area characterization techniques, the electronic structure and the changes in the morphology/roughness of thermally oxidized copper thin films were revealed during CORR. For this purpose, we developed an in situ cell for X-ray spectroscopy that could be operated accurately in the presence of gases or liquids to clarify the role of the initial thermal oxide phase and its active phase during the electrocatalytic reduction of CO.

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Supported atomic metal sites have discrete molecular orbitals. Precise control over the energies of these sites is key to achieving novel reaction pathways with superior selectivity. Here, we achieve selective oxygen (O) activation by utilising a framework of cerium (Ce) cations to reduce the energy of 3d orbitals of isolated copper (Cu) sites.

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Electrochemistry is a promising building block for the global transition to a sustainable energy market. Particularly the electroreduction of CO and the electrolysis of water might be strategic elements for chemical energy conversion. The reactions of interest are inner-sphere reactions, which occur on the surface of the electrode, and the biased interface between the electrode surface and the electrolyte is of central importance to the reactivity of an electrode.

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The variation in the morphology and electronic structure of copper during the electroreduction of CO into valuable hydrocarbons and alcohols was revealed by combining surface- and bulk-sensitive X-ray spectroscopies with electrochemical scanning electron microscopy. These experiments proved that the electrified interface surface and near-surface are dominated by reduced copper. The selectivity to the formation of the key C-C bond is enhanced at higher cathodic potentials as a consequence of increased copper metallicity.

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Understanding the role of the oxidation state of the Cu surface and surface-adsorbed intermediate species in electrochemical CO reduction is crucial for the development of selective CO-to-fuel electrocatalysts. In this study, the electrochemical CO reduction mechanism over the Cu catalysts with various oxidation states was studied by using in situ surface-enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (SEIRAS), in situ soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy (Cu L-edge), and online gas chromatography measurements. The atop-adsorbed CO (CO) intermediate is obtained on the electrodeposited Cu surface which primarily has the oxidation state of Cu(I).

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During the electrochemical reduction of oxygen, platinum catalysts are often (partially) oxidized. While these platinum oxides are thought to play a crucial role in fuel cell degradation, their nature remains unclear. Here, we studied the electrochemical oxidation of Pt nanoparticles using in situ XPS.

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The carbon-carbon coupling via electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide represents the biggest challenge for using this route as platform for chemicals synthesis. Here we show that nanostructured iron (III) oxyhydroxide on nitrogen-doped carbon enables high Faraday efficiency (97.4%) and selectivity to acetic acid (61%) at very-low potential (-0.

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The selective hydrogenation of propyne over a Pd-black model catalyst was investigated under conditions at 1 bar making use of advanced X-ray diffraction (bulk sensitive) and photo-electron spectroscopy (surface sensitive) techniques. It was found that the population of subsurface species controls the selective catalytic semi-hydrogenation of propyne to propylene due to the formation of surface and near-surface PdC that inhibits the participation of more reactive bulk hydrogen in the hydrogenation reaction. However, increasing the partial pressure of hydrogen reduces the population of PdC with the concomitant formation of a β-PdH phase up to the surface, which is accompanied by a lattice expansion, allowing the participation of more active bulk hydrogen which is responsible for the unselective total alkyne hydrogenation.

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The electrodeposition nature of copper on a gold electrode in a 4.8 pH CuSO solution was inquired using X-ray absorption spectroscopy, electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance, and thermal desorption spectroscopy techniques. Our results point out that the electrodeposition of copper prompts the formation of stable oxi-hydroxide species with a formal oxidation state Cu without the evidence of metallic copper formation (Cu).

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Detection of ionic current with two electrodes installed in a liquid cell has been established previously as an effective method, termed as total ion yield (TIY), to acquire X-ray absorption (XA) spectra of liquid solutions behind a membrane. In this study, the exact locations where TIY signals are generated are further investigated and unequivocally identified. The detected ionic current stems dominantly from the bulk solution species while only marginally from the species located at the membrane-solution interface.

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Water splitting performed in acidic media relies on the exceptional performance of iridium-based materials to catalyze the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). In the present work, we use X-ray photoemission and absorption spectroscopy to resolve the long-standing debate about surface species present in iridium-based catalysts during the OER. We find that the surface of an initially metallic iridium model electrode converts into a mixed-valent, conductive iridium oxide matrix during the OER, which contains O and electrophilic O species.

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