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Dive into the research topics where Wesley T. Hong is active.

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Featured researches published by Wesley T. Hong.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2015

Toward the rational design of non-precious transition metal oxides for oxygen electrocatalysis

Wesley T. Hong; Marcel Risch; Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Alexis Grimaud; Jin Suntivich; Yang Shao-Horn

In this Review, we discuss the state-of-the-art understanding of non-precious transition metal oxides that catalyze the oxygen reduction and evolution reactions. Understanding and mastering the kinetics of oxygen electrocatalysis is instrumental to making use of photosynthesis, advancing solar fuels, fuel cells, electrolyzers, and metal–air batteries. We first present key insights, assumptions and limitations of well-known activity descriptors and reaction mechanisms in the past four decades. The turnover frequency of crystalline oxides as promising catalysts is also put into perspective with amorphous oxides and photosystem II. Particular attention is paid to electronic structure parameters that can potentially govern the adsorbate binding strength and thus provide simple rationales and design principles to predict new catalyst chemistries with enhanced activity. We share new perspective synthesizing mechanism and electronic descriptors developed from both molecular orbital and solid state band structure principles. We conclude with an outlook on the opportunities in future research within this rapidly developing field.


Nature Communications | 2013

Double perovskites as a family of highly active catalysts for oxygen evolution in alkaline solution

Alexis Grimaud; Kevin J. May; Christopher E. Carlton; Yueh-Lin Lee; Marcel Risch; Wesley T. Hong; Jigang Zhou; Yang Shao-Horn

The electronic structure of transition metal oxides governs the catalysis of many central reactions for energy storage applications such as oxygen electrocatalysis. Here we exploit the versatility of the perovskite structure to search for oxide catalysts that are both active and stable. We report double perovskites (Ln₀.₅Ba₀.₅)CoO(₃-δ) (Ln=Pr, Sm, Gd and Ho) as a family of highly active catalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction upon water oxidation in alkaline solution. These double perovskites are stable unlike pseudocubic perovskites with comparable activities such as Ba₀.₅Sr₀.₅Co₀.₈Fe₀.₂O(₃-δ) which readily amorphize during the oxygen evolution reaction. The high activity and stability of these double perovskites can be explained by having the O p-band centre neither too close nor too far from the Fermi level, which is computed from ab initio studies.


Nature Materials | 2016

Anionic redox processes for electrochemical devices

Alexis Grimaud; Wesley T. Hong; Yang Shao-Horn; J.-M. Tarascon

Understanding and controlling anionic redox processes is pivotal for the design of new Li-ion battery and water-splitting materials.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

La0.8Sr0.2MnO3−δ Decorated with Ba0.5Sr0.5Co0.8Fe0.2O3−δ: A Bifunctional Surface for Oxygen Electrocatalysis with Enhanced Stability and Activity

Marcel Risch; Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Shingo Maruyama; Wesley T. Hong; Ichiro Takeuchi; Yang Shao-Horn

Developing highly active and stable catalysts based on earth-abundant elements for oxygen electrocatalysis is critical to enable efficient energy storage and conversion. In this work, we took advantage of the high intrinsic oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity of La(0.8)Sr(0.2)MnO(3-δ) (LSMO) and the high intrinsic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) activity of Ba(0.5)Sr(0.5)Co(0.8)Fe(0.2)O(3-δ) (BSCF) to develop a novel bifunctional catalyst. We used pulsed laser deposition to fabricate well-defined surfaces composed of BSCF on thin-film LSMO grown on (001)-oriented Nb-doped SrTiO3. These surfaces exhibit bifunctionality for oxygen electrocatalysis with enhanced activities and stability for both the ORR and OER that rival the state-of-the-art single- and multicomponent catalysts in the literature.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

La0.8Sr0.2MnO3-delta Decorated with Ba0.5Sr0.5Co0.3Fe0.2O3-delta: A Bifunctional Surface for Oxygen Electrocatalysis with Enhanced Stability and Activity

Marcel Risch; Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Shingo Maruyama; Wesley T. Hong; Ichiro Takeuchi; Yang Shao-Horn

Developing highly active and stable catalysts based on earth-abundant elements for oxygen electrocatalysis is critical to enable efficient energy storage and conversion. In this work, we took advantage of the high intrinsic oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) activity of La(0.8)Sr(0.2)MnO(3-δ) (LSMO) and the high intrinsic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) activity of Ba(0.5)Sr(0.5)Co(0.8)Fe(0.2)O(3-δ) (BSCF) to develop a novel bifunctional catalyst. We used pulsed laser deposition to fabricate well-defined surfaces composed of BSCF on thin-film LSMO grown on (001)-oriented Nb-doped SrTiO3. These surfaces exhibit bifunctionality for oxygen electrocatalysis with enhanced activities and stability for both the ORR and OER that rival the state-of-the-art single- and multicomponent catalysts in the literature.


Nature Chemistry | 2017

Activating lattice oxygen redox reactions in metal oxides to catalyse oxygen evolution

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

Understanding how materials that catalyse the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) function is essential for the development of efficient energy-storage technologies. The traditional understanding of the OER mechanism on metal oxides involves four concerted proton-electron transfer steps on metal-ion centres at their surface and product oxygen molecules derived from water. Here, using in situ 18O isotope labelling mass spectrometry, we provide direct experimental evidence that the O2 generated during the OER on some highly active oxides can come from lattice oxygen. The oxides capable of lattice-oxygen oxidation also exhibit pH-dependent OER activity on the reversible hydrogen electrode scale, indicating non-concerted proton-electron transfers in the OER mechanism. Based on our experimental data and density functional theory calculations, we discuss mechanisms that are fundamentally different from the conventional scheme and show that increasing the covalency of metal-oxygen bonds is critical to trigger lattice-oxygen oxidation and enable non-concerted proton-electron transfers during OER.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Anomalous Interface and Surface Strontium Segregation in (La1–ySry)2CoO4±δ/La1–xSrxCoO3−δ Heterostructured Thin Films

Zhenxing Feng; Yizhak Yacoby; Milind Gadre; Yueh-Lin Lee; Wesley T. Hong; Hua Zhou; Michael D. Biegalski; Hans M. Christen; Stuart B. Adler; Dane Morgan; Yang Shao-Horn

Heterostructured oxides have shown unusual electrochemical properties including enhanced catalytic activity, ion transport, and stability. In particular, it has been shown recently that the activity of oxygen electrocatalysis on the Ruddlesden-Popper/perovskite (La1-ySry)2CoO4±δ/La1-xSrxCoO3-δ heterostructure is remarkably enhanced relative to the Ruddlesden-Popper and perovskite constituents. Here we report the first atomic-scale structure and composition of (La1-ySry)2CoO4±δ/La1-xSrxCoO3-δ grown on SrTiO3. We observe anomalous strontium segregation from the perovskite to the interface and the Ruddlesden-Popper phase using direct X-ray methods as well as with ab initio calculations. Such Sr segregation occurred during the film growth, and no significant changes were found upon subsequent annealing in O2. Our findings provide insights into the design of highly active catalysts for oxygen electrocatalysis.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

Tuning the Spin State in LaCoO3 Thin Films for Enhanced High-Temperature Oxygen Electrocatalysis

Wesley T. Hong; Milind Gadre; Yueh-Lin Lee; Michael D. Biegalski; Hans M. Christen; Dane Morgan; Yang Shao-Horn

The slow kinetics of oxygen surface exchange hinders the efficiency of high-temperature oxygen electrocatalytic devices such as solid oxide fuel cells and oxygen separation membranes. Systematic investigations of material properties that link to catalytic activity can aid in the rational design of highly active cathode materials. Here, we explore LaCoO3 thin films as a model system for tuning catalytic activity through strain-induced changes in the Co spin state. We demonstrate that Raman spectroscopy can be used to probe the Co-O bond strength at different temperatures to determine the relative spin occupancies of LaCoO3. We find that strain can be used to reduce the spin transition temperature and promote the occupation of higher spin states that weaken the Co-O bond. The decrease in Co-O bond strength and increased spin moment of the thin films result in significant enhancements of the oxygen surface exchange kinetics by up to 2 orders of magnitude.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Thickness-Dependent Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting on Ultrathin LaFeO3 Films Grown on Nb:SrTiO3

Kevin J. May; David P. Fenning; Tian Ming; Wesley T. Hong; Dongkyu Lee; Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Michael D. Biegalski; Alexie M. Kolpak; Yang Shao-Horn

The performance of photoelectrodes can be modified by changing the material chemistry, geometry, and interface engineering. Specifically, nanoscale active layers can facilitate the collection of charge carriers. In heterostructure devices, the multiple material interfaces are particularly important, which at present are not well understood for oxides. Here, we report a detailed study of ultrathin (2-25 nm) LaFeO3 films grown epitaxially on Nb-doped SrTiO3. The films exhibit thickness-dependence with sensitivity to less than 10 nm in both the through-plane charge transfer conductivity and in the potential-dependent photoresponse. Supplementing photoelectrochemical measurements with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, spectroscopic ellipsometry, and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, we construct a band model that accounts for this thickness dependence via a shifting valence-band offset at the film-substrate interface and the potential-dependent overlap of the depletion regions present at both the film-substrate and film-electrolyte interfaces. These results illustrate the utility of using active layer thickness and film-substrate interactions to tune the performance of photoelectrodes, providing insight for the design of efficient heterostructure oxide photoelectrochemical devices.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2015

Insights into Electrochemical Reactions from Ambient Pressure Photoelectron Spectroscopy

Kelsey A. Stoerzinger; Wesley T. Hong; Ethan J. Crumlin; Hendrik Bluhm; Yang Shao-Horn

The understanding of fundamental processes in the bulk and at the interfaces of electrochemical devices is a prerequisite for the development of new technologies with higher efficiency and improved performance. One energy storage scheme of great interest is splitting water to form hydrogen and oxygen gas and converting back to electrical energy by their subsequent recombination with only water as a byproduct. However, kinetic limitations to the rate of oxygen-based electrochemical reactions hamper the efficiency in technologies such as solar fuels, fuel cells, and electrolyzers. For these reactions, the use of metal oxides as electrocatalysts is prevalent due to their stability, low cost, and ability to store oxygen within the lattice. However, due to the inherently convoluted nature of electrochemical and chemical processes in electrochemical systems, it is difficult to isolate and study individual electrochemical processes in a complex system. Therefore, in situ characterization tools are required for observing related physical and chemical processes directly at the places where and while they occur and can help elucidate the mechanisms of charge separation and charge transfer at electrochemical interfaces. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), also known as ESCA (electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis), has been used as a quantitative spectroscopic technique that measures the elemental composition, as well as chemical and electronic state of a material. Building from extensive ex situ characterization of electrochemical systems, initial in situ studies were conducted at or near ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions (≤10(-6) Torr) to probe solid-state electrochemical systems. However, through the integration of differential-pumping stages, XPS can now operate at pressures in the torr range, comprising a technique called ambient pressure XPS (AP-XPS). In this Account, we briefly review the working principles and current status of AP-XPS. We use several recent in situ studies on model electrochemical components as well as operando studies performed by our groups at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to illustrate that AP-XPS is both a chemically and an electrically specific tool since photoelectrons carry information on both the local chemistry and electrical potentials. The applications of AP-XPS to oxygen electrocatalysis shown in this Account span well-defined studies of (1) the oxide/oxygen gas interface, (2) the oxide/water vapor interface, and (3) operando measurements of half and full electrochemical cells. Using specially designed model devices, we can expose and isolate the electrode or interface of interest to the incident X-ray beam and AP-XPS analyzer to relate the electrical potentials to the composition/chemical state of the key components and interfaces. We conclude with an outlook on new developments of AP-XPS end stations, which may provide significant improvement in the observation of dynamics over a wide range of time scales, higher spatial resolution, and improved characterization of boundary or interface layers (solid/solid and liquid/solid).

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Yang Shao-Horn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Kelsey A. Stoerzinger

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Michael D. Biegalski

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Alexis Grimaud

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Yueh-Lin Lee

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Ethan J. Crumlin

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Dane Morgan

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Hans M. Christen

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Marcel Risch

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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