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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan Hwang is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan Hwang.


Science | 2017

Perovskites in catalysis and electrocatalysis

Jonathan Hwang; Reshma R. Rao; Livia Giordano; Yu Katayama; Yang Yu; Yang Shao-Horn

Catalysts for chemical and electrochemical reactions underpin many aspects of modern technology and industry, from energy storage and conversion to toxic emissions abatement to chemical and materials synthesis. This role necessitates the design of highly active, stable, yet earth-abundant heterogeneous catalysts. In this Review, we present the perovskite oxide family as a basis for developing such catalysts for (electro)chemical conversions spanning carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen chemistries. A framework for rationalizing activity trends and guiding perovskite oxide catalyst design is described, followed by illustrations of how a robust understanding of perovskite electronic structure provides fundamental insights into activity, stability, and mechanism in oxygen electrocatalysis. We conclude by outlining how these insights open experimental and computational opportunities to expand the compositional and chemical reaction space for next-generation perovskite catalysts.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2017

Charge-transfer-energy-dependent oxygen evolution reaction mechanisms for perovskite oxides

Wesley T. Hong; Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Yueh-Lin Lee; Livia Giordano; Alexis Grimaud; Alyssa M. Johnson; Jonathan Hwang; Ethan J. Crumlin; Wanli Yang; Yang Shao-Horn

Numerous studies have reported electronic activity descriptors of oxygen evolution reaction (OER) for oxide catalysts under a single reaction mechanism. However, recent works have revealed that a single mechanism is not at play across oxide chemistries. These works underscore a need to deeply investigate the electronic structure details of active oxide catalysts and how they align with the OER potential, which is critical to understanding the interfacial charge-transfer kinetics that dictate catalytic mechanisms. In this work, we use soft X-ray emission and absorption spectroscopy of perovskites to analyze the partial density of states on an absolute energy scale, from which energetic barriers for electron transfer and surface deprotonation were estimated and correlated with OER activity. Through this lens, we identify that decreasing the solid-state charge-transfer energy of perovskites can change the mechanisms of the OER from electron-transfer-limited to proton–electron-coupled, to proton-transfer-limited reactions. This concept is supported by the analysis of potential energy surfaces for sequential and concerted proton–electron transfer pathways using a Marcus model. Our work highlights the importance of understanding the physical origin of experimental OER activity trends with electronic descriptors and the need to promote surface deprotonation from oxides to discover new catalysts with enhanced activity.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2017

Solar hydrogen production using epitaxial SrTiO3 on a GaAs photovoltaic

Lior Kornblum; David P. Fenning; Joseph Faucher; Jonathan Hwang; A. Boni; Myung-Geun Han; M. D. Morales-Acosta; Yimei Zhu; Eric I. Altman; Minjoo Larry Lee; C. H. Ahn; Fred Walker; Yang Shao-Horn

We demonstrate an oxide-stabilized III–V photoelectrode architecture for solar fuel production from water in neutral pH. For this tunable architecture we demonstrate 100% Faradaic efficiency for hydrogen evolution, and incident photon-to-current efficiencies (IPCE) exceeding 50%. High IPCE for hydrogen evolution is a consequence of the low-loss interface achieved via epitaxial growth of a thin oxide on a GaAs solar cell. Developing optimal energetic alignment across the interfaces of the photoelectrode using well-established III–V technology is key to obtaining high performance. This advance constitutes a critical milestone towards efficient, unassisted fuel production from solar energy.


photovoltaic specialists conference | 2015

Broadband photoelectric hot carrier collection with wafer-scale metallic-semiconductor photonic crystals

Jeffrey B. Chou; David P. Fenning; Yu Wang; Miguel Angel Mendez Polanco; Jonathan Hwang; Asmaa Elfaer; Firas Sammoura; Jaime Viegas; Mahmoud Rasras; Alexie M. Kolpak; Yang Shao-Horn; Sang-Gook Kim

Photoelectric hot carrier generation in metal-semiconductor junctions can enable optical-to-electrical energy conversion at photon energies below the bandgap of the semiconductor. Here, we present the simulated and experimental results of our wafer-scale Au/TiO2 metallic-semiconductor photonic crystal (MSPhC). We demonstrate a broadband sub-bandgap photoresponse with a FWHM of 235 nm centered at 590 nm due to surface plasmon absorption, and we also show a photoresponse enhancement factor of 4.5 at 639 nm compared to a flat chip. Photoresponse is also shown to increase with decreasing metal thickness down to 13 nm. Applications of our results could lead to low-cost and robust photoelectrochemical and thermo-photovoltaic devices.


Topics in Catalysis | 2018

Speciation and Electronic Structure of La 1−x Sr x CoO 3−δ During Oxygen Electrolysis

Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Xiao Renshaw Wang; Jonathan Hwang; Reshma R. Rao; Wesley T. Hong; Christopher M. Rouleau; Dongwook Lee; Yi Yu; Ethan J. Crumlin; Yang Shao-Horn

Cobalt-containing perovskite oxides are promising electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in alkaline electrolyzers. However, a lack of fundamental understanding of oxide surfaces impedes rational catalyst design for improved activity and stability. We couple electrochemical studies of epitaxial La1−xSrxCoO3−δ films with in situ and operando ambient pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy to investigate the surface stoichiometry, adsorbates, and electronic structure. In situ investigations spanning electrode compositions in a humid environment indicate that hydroxyl and carbonate affinity increase with Sr content, leading to an increase in binding energy of metal core levels and the valence band edge from the formation of a surface dipole. The maximum in hydroxylation at 40% Sr is commensurate with the highest OER activity, where activity scales with greater hole carrier concentration and mobility. Operando measurements of the 20% Sr-doped oxide in alkaline electrolyte indicate that the surface stoichiometry remains constant during OER, supporting the idea that the oxide electrocatalyst is stable and behaves as a metal, with the voltage drop confined to the electrolyte. Furthermore, hydroxyl and carbonate species are present on the electrode surface even under oxidizing conditions, and may impact the availability of active sites or the binding strength of adsorbed intermediates via adsorbate–adsorbate interactions. For covalent oxides with facile charge transfer kinetics, the accumulation of hydroxyl species with oxidative potentials suggests the rate of reaction could be limited by proton transfer kinetics. This operando insight will help guide modeling of self-consistent oxide electrocatalysts, and highlights the potential importance of carbonates in oxygen electrocatalysis.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018

Sulfide-Derived Copper for Electrochemical Conversion of CO2 to Formic Acid

Katherine R. Phillips; Yu Katayama; Jonathan Hwang; Yang Shao-Horn

The electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) has gained attention recently due to rising concern over atmospheric carbon levels, but catalyst selectivity and efficiency remain a challenge, particularly for products other than CO. Here, we report the selective formation of formate using a sulfide-derived copper (SD-Cu) catalyst for CO2RR. On the basis of in situ and postelectrolysis spectroscopy, we propose that this selectivity is due to stronger binding of the CO intermediate originating from remaining subsurface sulfur atoms.


Joule | 2017

Tuning Redox Transitions via Inductive Effect in Metal Oxides and Complexes, and Implications in Oxygen Electrocatalysis

Denis A. Kuznetsov; Binghong Han; Yang Yu; Reshma R. Rao; Jonathan Hwang; Yuriy Román-Leshkov; Yang Shao-Horn


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2018

Iron-Based Perovskites for Catalyzing Oxygen Evolution Reaction

Binghong Han; Alexis Grimaud; Livia Giordano; Wesley T. Hong; Oscar Diaz-Morales; Lee Yueh-Lin; Jonathan Hwang; Nenian Charles; Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Wanli Yang; Marc T. M. Koper; Yang Shao-Horn


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2018

Surface Orientation Dependent Water Dissociation on Rutile Ruthenium Dioxide

Reshma R. Rao; Manuel Kolb; Jonathan Hwang; Anders Gorm Pedersen; Apurva Mehta; Hoydoo You; Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Zhenxing Feng; Hua Zhou; Hendrik Bluhm; Livia Giordano; Ifan E. L. Stephens; Yang Shao-Horn


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2018

CO2 Reactivity on Cobalt-Based Perovskites

Jonathan Hwang; Reshma R. Rao; Yu Katayama; Dongkyu Lee; Xiao Renshaw Wang; Ethan J. Crumlin; T. Venkatesan; Ho Nyung Lee; Yang Shao-Horn

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Yang Shao-Horn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Reshma R. Rao

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Kelsey A. Stoerzinger

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Livia Giordano

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ethan J. Crumlin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Wesley T. Hong

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Alexis Grimaud

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Binghong Han

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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