2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(326j) Reactivity Vs. Durability: Building Physics-Driven, Quantitative Blueprints of Catalytic Interfaces for Decarbonization
Authors
My research addresses this scientific questionâhow to physically elucidate and quantitatively engineer catalysts on the atomic scale to have optimal activity and stability for diverse renewable technologies. To this end, I have identified one of the first-ever sets of stability design principles for inhibiting catalyst dissolution in acid, where modulating the electronic structure of transition metal oxides and nitrides stabilizes these catalysts against decomposition in acidic electrolytes by controlling the bonding character and dissolution barrier. [2,3]. Moreover, I have shown that rationally tuning the electron-withdrawing capability of heterometal substituents in transition metal oxides optimizes their bonding properties, reaction barrier, and catalytic activity for electrochemical water splitting to generate clean hydrogen fuels [4,5]. These design principles provide new, physics-driven blueprints with quantitative predictive power for activityâstability optimization in catalyst development to combat the most recalcitrant, urgent societal challenges in sustainability and decarbonization, including climate change, environmental pollution, and energy and food insecurity. Such design principles can also motivate future work to rationalize, control, and balance the reactivity and durability of other key reactive interfaces for clean energy conversion and storage, e.g., in batteries and photovoltaics, and bring qualitative changes to the world.
References:
[1] Peng, et al. Nat. Rev. Mater. 7, 991â1009 (2022).
[2] Peng, et al. Joule 7, 150â167 (2023).
[3] Peng, et al. Chem. Mater. 34, 7774â7787 (2022).
[4] Yuanâ , Pengâ , Caiâ , et al. Nat. Mater. 21, 673â680 (2022). (â denotes equal contribution)
[5] Kuznetsovâ , Pengâ , et al. J. Phys. Chem. C 124, 6562â6570 (2020). (â denotes equal contribution)