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      CeO 2 Functionalized Cobalt Layered Double Hydroxide for Efficient Catalytic Oxygen‐Evolving Reaction

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          Opportunities and challenges for a sustainable energy future.

          Access to clean, affordable and reliable energy has been a cornerstone of the world's increasing prosperity and economic growth since the beginning of the industrial revolution. Our use of energy in the twenty-first century must also be sustainable. Solar and water-based energy generation, and engineering of microbes to produce biofuels are a few examples of the alternatives. This Perspective puts these opportunities into a larger context by relating them to a number of aspects in the transportation and electricity generation sectors. It also provides a snapshot of the current energy landscape and discusses several research and development opportunities and pathways that could lead to a prosperous, sustainable and secure energy future for the world.
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            General synthesis and definitive structural identification of MN4C4 single-atom catalysts with tunable electrocatalytic activities

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              A review on fundamentals for designing oxygen evolution electrocatalysts

              The fundamentals related to the oxygen evolution reaction and catalyst design are summarized and discussed. Electricity-driven water splitting can facilitate the storage of electrical energy in the form of hydrogen gas. As a half-reaction of electricity-driven water splitting, the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is the major bottleneck due to the sluggish kinetics of this four-electron transfer reaction. Developing low-cost and robust OER catalysts is critical to solving this efficiency problem in water splitting. The catalyst design has to be built based on the fundamental understanding of the OER mechanism and the origin of the reaction overpotential. In this article, we summarize the recent progress in understanding OER mechanisms, which include the conventional adsorbate evolution mechanism (AEM) and lattice-oxygen-mediated mechanism (LOM) from both theoretical and experimental aspects. We start with the discussion on the AEM and its linked scaling relations among various reaction intermediates. The strategies to reduce overpotential based on the AEM and its derived descriptors are then introduced. To further reduce the OER overpotential, it is necessary to break the scaling relation of HOO* and HO* intermediates in conventional AEM to go beyond the activity limitation of the volcano relationship. Strategies such as stabilization of HOO*, proton acceptor functionality, and switching the OER pathway to LOM are discussed. The remaining questions on the OER and related perspectives are also presented at the end.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Small
                Small
                Wiley
                1613-6810
                1613-6829
                April 2022
                March 28 2022
                April 2022
                : 18
                : 17
                : 2107594
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering Harbin Institute of Technology Harbin 150001 P. R. China
                [2 ]Department of Chemistry Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Energy Materials for Electric Power and Key Laboratory of Energy Conversion and Storage Technologies (Ministry of Education) Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen 518055 P. R. China
                Article
                10.1002/smll.202107594
                22529d36-9874-42bb-8313-1f7eb4963b3a
                © 2022

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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