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      Engineering Bimetallic NiFe‐Based Hydroxides/Selenides Heterostructure Nanosheet Arrays for Highly‐Efficient Oxygen Evolution Reaction

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          Combining theory and experiment in electrocatalysis: Insights into materials design

          Electrocatalysis plays a central role in clean energy conversion, enabling a number of sustainable processes for future technologies. This review discusses design strategies for state-of-the-art heterogeneous electrocatalysts and associated materials for several different electrochemical transformations involving water, hydrogen, and oxygen, using theory as a means to rationalize catalyst performance. By examining the common principles that govern catalysis for different electrochemical reactions, we describe a systematic framework that clarifies trends in catalyzing these reactions, serving as a guide to new catalyst development while highlighting key gaps that need to be addressed. We conclude by extending this framework to emerging clean energy reactions such as hydrogen peroxide production, carbon dioxide reduction, and nitrogen reduction, where the development of improved catalysts could allow for the sustainable production of a broad range of fuels and chemicals.
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            Ab initiomolecular-dynamics simulation of the liquid-metal–amorphous-semiconductor transition in germanium

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              A perovskite oxide optimized for oxygen evolution catalysis from molecular orbital principles.

              The efficiency of many energy storage technologies, such as rechargeable metal-air batteries and hydrogen production from water splitting, is limited by the slow kinetics of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). We found that Ba(0.5)Sr(0.5)Co(0.8)Fe(0.2)O(3-δ) (BSCF) catalyzes the OER with intrinsic activity that is at least an order of magnitude higher than that of the state-of-the-art iridium oxide catalyst in alkaline media. The high activity of BSCF was predicted from a design principle established by systematic examination of more than 10 transition metal oxides, which showed that the intrinsic OER activity exhibits a volcano-shaped dependence on the occupancy of the 3d electron with an e(g) symmetry of surface transition metal cations in an oxide. The peak OER activity was predicted to be at an e(g) occupancy close to unity, with high covalency of transition metal-oxygen bonds.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Small
                Small
                Wiley
                1613-6810
                1613-6829
                February 2021
                January 27 2021
                February 2021
                : 17
                : 7
                : 2007334
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Material Science and Engineering Hebei University of Technology Tianjin 300130 P. R. China
                [2 ]SEU‐FEI Nano‐Pico Center Key Laboratory of MEMS of Ministry of Education Southeast University Nanjing 210096 China
                [3 ]Department of Physics and Astronomy University of California Irvine CA 92697 USA
                Article
                10.1002/smll.202007334
                508e3baa-b9e9-494c-b1c8-78071f9a2f49
                © 2021

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

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

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