Abstract
Thermochemical redox catalysis is critical to a wide array of key chemical transformations and is known to be sensitive to catalyst surface structure. Yet there exist limited operando tools for quantitatively imaging heterogeneities in catalytic rate across a surface. Since many thermochemical redox reactions can proceed via the coupling of electrochemical half-reactions, electrochemical microscopies can, in principle, be used to image heterogeneities in thermochemical redox catalysis. Herein, we develop a methodology for imaging variations in the rate of thermochemical redox catalysis using electrochemical microscopy. Using Pt-catalyzed aerobic oxidation of formic acid oxidation as a test reaction, scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) imaging reveals grain-dependent variations in catalytic rate for the underlying oxygen reduction and formic acid oxidation half-reactions, implying inter-grain cooperativity during ensemble thermochemical catalysis via lateral current flows that galvanically couple disparate active sites. Tafel analysis of current-potential profiles in the presence of both reactants reveals the nature of cross-talk between the two half-reactions and provides quantitative spatially-resolved images of catalytic rates for the net thermochemical reaction. These studies establish a methodology for using electrochemical microscopy to image thermochemical catalysis and expose how electrochemical half-reactions couple and interact across surface structures to enable redox transformations.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting information for Electrochemical Imaging of Thermochemical Catalysis
Description
This document provides all the figures and tables mentioned in the manuscript.
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