Elucidating the validity of electronic characteristics of transition metal perovskites as descriptors bridging electro- and chemocatalysis†
Abstract
The analysis of electronic characteristics as descriptors for the efficacy of catalysts provides fundamental insights into catalyst design criteria, but few studies address the applicability of descriptors across a broader range of reactions. This study on perovskite-type, B-site substituted LaCoO3 derivates analyses the generalisability of the descriptor nature of electronic characteristics for electro- and chemocatalytic reactions – more specifically the occupancy of transition metal (TM) 3d orbitals, charge-transfer energy (CTE), and covalency in the interaction of O 2p – TM 3d states. The results show that among the analysed characteristics only covalency is a quasi-linear descriptor for the performance in electrocatalytic oxygen evolution reaction (OER), glycerol electro-oxidation reaction (GOR), as well as in five chemocatalytic reactions. The analysis of the reduction reaction of NO or N2O by CO illustrates that not only reaction rates but also selectivity is determined by the same electronic catalyst characteristics. Measurement conditions in the analysis of electronic characteristics need to be chosen to recreate the oxidation state during the reaction-specific kinetically relevant step to yield adequate descriptor correlations. The results imply that significant synergies may be leveraged by enhanced collaboration across electro- and chemocatalysis research.