February 21, 2018
Journal Article

Potential-specific structure at the hematite-electrolyte interface

Abstract

The atomic-scale structure of interfaces between metal oxides and aqueous electrolytes controls their catalytic, geochemical, and corrosion behavior. Measurements that probe these interfaces in situ provide important details of ion and solvent arrangements, but atomically precise structural models do not exist for common oxide-electrolyte interfaces far from equilibrium. Using a novel cell, we measured the structure of the hematite (a-Fe2O3) (11 ¯02)-electrolyte interface under controlled electrochemical bias using synchrotron crystal truncation rod X ray scattering. At increasingly cathodic potentials, charge-compensating protonation of surface oxygen groups increases the coverage of specifically bound water while adjacent water layers displace outwardly and became disordered. Returning to open circuit potential leaves the surface in a persistent metastable protonation state. The flux of current and ions at applied potential is thus regulated by a unique interfacial electrolyte environment, suggesting that electrical double layer models should be adapted to the dynamically changing interfacial structure far from equilibrium.

Revised: February 19, 2018 | Published: February 21, 2018

Citation

McBriarty M.E., J. Stubbs, P. Eng, and K.M. Rosso. 2018. Potential-specific structure at the hematite-electrolyte interface. Advanced Functional Materials 28, no. 8:Article No. 1705618. PNNL-SA-128852. doi:10.1002/adfm.201705618