O2 Reduction Stimulates Adatom Generation on Cu(111) Catalyzing Hydrogen Evolution

22 November 2025, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Electrochemical mass spectrometry (EC-MS) was used to investigate the coupled dynamics of surface hydride formation, the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), and the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) on Cu(111) in perchloric acid. Starting with an Ar-saturated electrolyte, hydride formation proceeds via two overlapping cathodic waves that evolve with cycling due to restructuring of the electrode surface associated with removal of residual oxide species. Grand canonical free-energy calculations indicate that the surface hydride stabilizes pristine terraces against roughening and helps anneal vacancy-adatom defects introduced during specimen preparation. Introducing controlled amounts of O₂ markedly perturbs this behavior, shifting hydride formation to more negative potentials and accelerating HER kinetics, as revealed by EC-MS. Density functional theory and molecular dynamics simulations show that co-adsorption of H with ORR intermediates (OH*/OOH*) promotes Cu(111) restructuring through adatom–vacancy formation and subsurface O incorporation. The resulting fluxional adatom sites enhance HER activity and modulate ORR kinetics under mixed control. Extended O₂ exposure irreversibly restructures the surface and reshapes the hydride formation waves resulting in a lasting imprint on surface reactivity that remains even after returning to nominally O2-free conditions. These findings demonstrate that coupled adsorbates restructure Cu(111) under electrochemical bias, generating active sites with direct implications for the performance and stability of Cu electrocatalysts.

Keywords

Electrocatalysis
Cu(111)
Surface hydride formation
Electrochemical mass spectrometry
Surface restructuring
Electrode morphology evolution
Fluxional active sites
Oxygen reduction reaction
Hydrogen evolution reaction
Adsorbate interactions

Supplementary materials

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