Energetic basis of catalytic activity of layered nanophase calcium manganese oxides for water oxidation

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Abstract

Previous measurements show that calcium manganese oxide nanoparticles are better water oxidation catalysts than binary manganese oxides (Mn3O4, Mn2O3, and MnO2). The probable reasons for such enhancement involve a combination of factors: The calcium manganese oxide materials have a layered structure with considerable thermodynamic stability and a high surface area, their low surface energy suggests relatively loose binding of H2O on the internal and external surfaces, and they possess mixed-valent manganese with internal oxidation enthalpy independent of the Mn3+/ Mn4+ ratio and much smaller in magnitude than the Mn2O3-MnO2 couple. These factors enhance catalytic ability by providing easy access for solutes and water to active sites and facile electron transfer between manganese in different oxidation states.

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Birkner, N., Nayeri, S., Pashaei, B., Najafpour, M. M., Casey, W. H., & Navrotsky, A. (2013). Energetic basis of catalytic activity of layered nanophase calcium manganese oxides for water oxidation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(22), 8801–8806. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1306623110

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