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Dive into the research topics where Eva Mutoro is active.

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Featured researches published by Eva Mutoro.


Scientific Reports | 2012

In Situ Ambient Pressure X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy Studies of Lithium-Oxygen Redox Reactions

Yi-Chun Lu; Ethan J. Crumlin; Gabriel M. Veith; Jonathon R. Harding; Eva Mutoro; Loïc Baggetto; Nancy J. Dudney; Zhi Liu; Yang Shao-Horn

The lack of fundamental understanding of the oxygen reduction and oxygen evolution in nonaqueous electrolytes significantly hinders the development of rechargeable lithium-air batteries. Here we employ a solid-state Li4+xTi5O12/LiPON/LixV2O5 cell and examine in situ the chemistry of Li-O2 reaction products on LixV2O5 as a function of applied voltage under ultra high vacuum (UHV) and at 500 mtorr of oxygen pressure using ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS). Under UHV, lithium intercalated into LixV2O5 while molecular oxygen was reduced to form lithium peroxide on LixV2O5 in the presence of oxygen upon discharge. Interestingly, the oxidation of Li2O2 began at much lower overpotentials (~240 mV) than the charge overpotentials of conventional Li-O2 cells with aprotic electrolytes (~1000 mV). Our study provides the first evidence of reversible lithium peroxide formation and decomposition in situ on an oxide surface using a solid-state cell, and new insights into the reaction mechanism of Li-O2 chemistry.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2012

Surface strontium enrichment on highly active perovskites for oxygen electrocatalysis in solid oxide fuel cells

Ethan J. Crumlin; Eva Mutoro; Zhi Liu; Michael E. Grass; Michael D. Biegalski; Yueh-Lin Lee; Dane Morgan; Hans M. Christen; Hendrik Bluhm; Yang Shao-Horn

Perovskite oxides have high catalytic activities for oxygen electrocatalysis competitive to platinum at elevated temperatures. However, little is known about the oxide surface chemistry that influences the activity near ambient oxygen partial pressures, which hampers the design of highly active catalysts for many clean-energy technologies such as solid oxide fuel cells. Using in situsynchrotron-based, ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to study the surface chemistry changes, we show that the coverage of surface secondary phases on a (001)-oriented La0.8Sr0.2CoO3−δ (LSC) film becomes smaller than that on an LSC powder pellet at elevated temperatures. In addition, strontium (Sr) in the perovskite structure enriches towards the film surface in contrast to the pellet having no detectable changes with increasing temperature. We propose that the ability to reduce surface secondary phases and develop Sr-enriched perovskite surfaces of the LSC film contributes to its enhanced activity for O2 electrocatalysis relative to LSC powder-based electrodes.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2011

Enhanced oxygen reduction activity on surface-decorated perovskite thin films for solid oxide fuel cells

Eva Mutoro; Ethan J. Crumlin; Michael D. Biegalski; Hans M. Christen; Yang Shao-Horn

Surface-decoration of perovskites can strongly affect the oxygen reduction activity, and therefore is a new and promising approach to improve SOFC cathode materials. In this study, we demonstrate that a small amount of secondary phase on a (001) La0.8Sr0.2CoO3−δ (LSC) surface can either significantly activate or passivate the electrode. LSC (001) microelectrodes prepared by pulsed laser deposition on a (001)-oriented yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) substrate were decorated with La-, Co-, and Sr-(hydr)oxides/carbonates. “Sr”-decoration with nanoparticle coverage in the range from 50% to 80% of the LSC surface enhanced the surface exchange coefficient, kq, by an order of magnitude while “La”-decoration and “Co”-decoration led to no change and reduction in kq, respectively. Although the physical origin for the enhancement is not fully understood, results from atomic force microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy suggest that the observed kq enhancement for “Sr”-decorated surfaces can be attributed largely to catalytically active interface regions between surface Sr-enriched particles and the LSC surface.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

In Situ Studies of the Temperature-Dependent Surface Structure and Chemistry of Single-Crystalline (001)-Oriented La0.8Sr0.2CoO3−δ Perovskite Thin Films

Zhenxing Feng; Ethan J. Crumlin; Wesley T. Hong; Dongkyu Lee; Eva Mutoro; Michael D. Biegalski; Hua Zhou; Hendrik Bluhm; Hans M. Christen; Yang Shao-Horn

Perovskites are used to promote the kinetics of oxygen electrocatalysis in solid oxide fuel cells and oxygen permeation membranes. Little is known about the surface structure and chemistry of perovskites at high temperatures and partial oxygen pressures. Combining in situ X-ray reflectivity (XRR) and in situ ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS), we report, for the first time, the evolution of the surface structure and chemistry of (001)-oriented perovskite La0.8Sr0.2CoO3-δ (LSC113) and (La0.5Sr0.5)2CoO4+δ (LSC214)-decorated LSC113 (LSC113/214) thin films as a function of temperature. Heating the (001)-oriented LSC113 surface leads to the formation of surface LSC214-like particles, which is further confirmed by ex situ Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). In contrast, the LSC113/214 surface, with activities much higher than that of LSC113, is stable upon heating. Combined in situ XRR and APXPS measurements support that Sr enrichment may occur at the LSC113 and LSC214 interface, which can be responsible for its markedly enhanced activities.


ACS Nano | 2013

Spatially resolved mapping of oxygen reduction/evolution reaction on solid-oxide fuel cell cathodes with sub-10 nm resolution.

Amit Kumar; Donovan N. Leonard; Stephen Jesse; Francesco Ciucci; Eugene A. Eliseev; Anna N. Morozovska; Michael D. Biegalski; Hans M. Christen; Alexander Tselev; Eva Mutoro; Ethan J. Crumlin; Dane Morgan; Yang Shao-Horn; Albina Y. Borisevich; Sergei V. Kalinin

Spatial localization of the oxygen reduction/evolution reactions on lanthanum strontium cobaltite (LSCO) surfaces with perovskite and layered perovskite structures is studied at the sub-10 nm level. Comparison between electrochemical strain microscopy (ESM) and structural imaging by scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) suggests that small-angle grain boundaries act as regions with enhanced electrochemical activity. The ESM activity is compared across a family of LSCO samples, demonstrating excellent agreement with macroscopic behaviors. This study potentially paves the way for deciphering the mechanisms of electrochemical activity of solids on the level of single extended structural defects such as grain boundaries and dislocations.


Topics in Catalysis | 2016

Near-Ambient Pressure XPS of High-Temperature Surface Chemistry in Sr2Co2O5 Thin Films

Wesley T. Hong; Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Ethan J. Crumlin; Eva Mutoro; Hyoungjeen Jeen; Ho Nyung Lee; Yang Shao-Horn

Transition metal perovskite oxides are promising electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) in fuel cells, but a lack of fundamental understanding of oxide surfaces impedes the rational design of novel catalysts with improved device efficiencies. In particular, understanding the surface chemistry of oxides is essential for controlling both catalytic activity and long-term stability. Thus, elucidating the physical nature of species on perovskite surfaces and their catalytic enhancement would generate new insights in developing oxide electrocatalysts. In this article, we perform near-ambient pressure XPS of model brownmillerite Sr2Co2O5 (SCO) epitaxial thin films with different crystallographic orientations. Detailed analysis of the Co 2p spectra suggests that the films lose oxygen as a function of temperature. Moreover, deconvolution of the O 1s spectra shows distinct behavior for (114)-oriented SCO films compared to (001)-oriented SCO films, where an additional bulk oxygen species is observed. These findings indicate a change to a perovskite-like oxygen chemistry that occurs more easily in (114) SCO than (001) SCO, likely due to the orientation of oxygen vacancy channels out-of-plane with respect to the film surface. This difference in surface chemistry is responsible for the anisotropy of the oxygen surface exchange coefficient of SCO and may contribute to the enhanced ORR kinetics of La0.8Sr0.2CoO3−δ thin films by SCO surface particles observed previously.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

Electrochemical activation of molecular nitrogen at the Ir/YSZ interface

Ilia Valov; Bjoern Luerssen; Eva Mutoro; Luca Gregoratti; Roger A. De Souza; Thomas Bredow; S. Günther; Alexei Barinov; Pavel Dudin; Manfred Martin; Jiirgen Janek

Nitrogen is often used as an inert background atmosphere in solid state studies of electrode and reaction kinetics, of solid state studies of transport phenomena, and in applications e.g. solid oxide fuel cells (SOFC), sensors and membranes. Thus, chemical and electrochemical reactions of oxides related to or with dinitrogen are not supposed and in general not considered. We demonstrate by a steady state electrochemical polarisation experiments complemented with in situ photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) that at a temperature of 450 °C dinitrogen can be electrochemically activated at the three phase boundary between N(2), a metal microelectrode and one of the most widely used solid oxide electrolytes--yttria stabilized zirconia (YSZ)--at potentials more negative than E = -1.25 V. The process is neither related to a reduction of the electrolyte nor to an adsorption process or a purely chemical reaction but is electrochemical in nature. Only at potentials more negative than E = -2 V did new components of Zr 3d and Y 3d signals with a lower formal charge appear, thus indicating electrochemical reduction of the electrolyte matrix. Theoretical model calculations suggest the presence of anionic intermediates with delocalized electrons at the electrode/electrolyte reaction interface. The ex situ SIMS analysis confirmed that nitrogen is incorporated and migrates into the electrolyte beneath the electrode.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

In situ examination of oxygen non-stoichiometry in La0.80Sr0.20CoO3−δ thin films at intermediate and low temperatures by x-ray diffraction

M. D. Biegalski; Ethan J. Crumlin; Alex Belianinov; Eva Mutoro; Yang Shao-Horn; Sergei V. Kalinin

Structural evolution of epitaxial La{sub 0.80}Sr{sub 0.20}CoO{sub 3−δ} thin films under chemical and voltage stimuli was examined in situ using X-ray diffraction. The changes in lattice parameter (chemical expansivity) were used to quantify oxygen reduction reaction processes and vacancy concentration changes in lanthanum strontium cobaltite. At 550 °C, the observed lattice parameter reduction at an applied bias of −0.6 V was equivalent to that from the reducing condition of a 2% carbon monoxide atmosphere with an oxygen non-stoichiometry δ of 0.24. At lower temperatures (200 °C), the application of bias reduced the sample much more effectively than a carbon monoxide atmosphere and induced an oxygen non-stoichiometry δ of 0.47. Despite these large changes in oxygen concentration, the epitaxial thin film was completely re-oxidized and no signs of crystallinity loss or film amorphization were observed. This work demonstrates that the effects of oxygen evolution and reduction can be examined with applied bias at low temperatures, extending the ability to probe these processes with in-situ analytical techniques.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

In situ examination of oxygen non-stoichiometry in La0.80Sr0.20CoO3 thin films at intermediate and low temperatures by X-ray diffraction

Michael D. Biegalski; Ethan J. Crumlin; Alex Belianinov; Eva Mutoro; Yang Shao-Horn; Sergei V. Kalinin

Structural evolution of epitaxial La{sub 0.80}Sr{sub 0.20}CoO{sub 3−δ} thin films under chemical and voltage stimuli was examined in situ using X-ray diffraction. The changes in lattice parameter (chemical expansivity) were used to quantify oxygen reduction reaction processes and vacancy concentration changes in lanthanum strontium cobaltite. At 550 °C, the observed lattice parameter reduction at an applied bias of −0.6 V was equivalent to that from the reducing condition of a 2% carbon monoxide atmosphere with an oxygen non-stoichiometry δ of 0.24. At lower temperatures (200 °C), the application of bias reduced the sample much more effectively than a carbon monoxide atmosphere and induced an oxygen non-stoichiometry δ of 0.47. Despite these large changes in oxygen concentration, the epitaxial thin film was completely re-oxidized and no signs of crystallinity loss or film amorphization were observed. This work demonstrates that the effects of oxygen evolution and reduction can be examined with applied bias at low temperatures, extending the ability to probe these processes with in-situ analytical techniques.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

In situ examination of oxygen non-stoichiometry in La{sub 0.80}Sr{sub 0.20}CoO{sub 3−δ} thin films at intermediate and low temperatures by x-ray diffraction

M. D. Biegalski; Alex Belianinov; Sergei V. Kalinin; Ethan J. Crumlin; Eva Mutoro; Yang Shao-Horn

Structural evolution of epitaxial La{sub 0.80}Sr{sub 0.20}CoO{sub 3−δ} thin films under chemical and voltage stimuli was examined in situ using X-ray diffraction. The changes in lattice parameter (chemical expansivity) were used to quantify oxygen reduction reaction processes and vacancy concentration changes in lanthanum strontium cobaltite. At 550 °C, the observed lattice parameter reduction at an applied bias of −0.6 V was equivalent to that from the reducing condition of a 2% carbon monoxide atmosphere with an oxygen non-stoichiometry δ of 0.24. At lower temperatures (200 °C), the application of bias reduced the sample much more effectively than a carbon monoxide atmosphere and induced an oxygen non-stoichiometry δ of 0.47. Despite these large changes in oxygen concentration, the epitaxial thin film was completely re-oxidized and no signs of crystallinity loss or film amorphization were observed. This work demonstrates that the effects of oxygen evolution and reduction can be examined with applied bias at low temperatures, extending the ability to probe these processes with in-situ analytical techniques.

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Yang Shao-Horn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ethan J. Crumlin

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Michael D. Biegalski

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Hans M. Christen

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Sergei V. Kalinin

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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H. Pöpke

University of Giessen

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Albina Y. Borisevich

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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