Open Access Article
Megan Heath
*,
Svein Sunde
and
Frode Seland
The Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, N-7491, Trondheim, Norway. E-mail: megan.heath@ntnu.no
First published on 20th October 2025
Ruthenate pyrochlores are highly tunable structures and promising OER electrocatalysts in both acidic and alkaline media. These structures provide a platform to balance activity, stability, and cost. This review critically examines the structural, electronic, and catalytic properties of rare-earth ruthenate pyrochlores, with a focus on how A- and B-site modifications and doping influence OER performance. We highlight the role of mixed-valence states, B–O covalency, and lattice distortions in enhancing catalytic activity, while also addressing the challenges of catalyst degradation and dissolution. Design strategies to further improve activity and stability are not clearly outlined in the literature, although the majority of studies incorporate acceptor doping to induce oxygen vacancies or mixed B-site valence. Furthermore, the review underscores the need for standardised electrochemical testing protocols. By consolidating recent advances and identifying structure–property relationships, this work provides a guideline for the rational design of pyrochlore OER electrocatalysts, as well as recommendations for how stability and activity should be evaluated.
Currently, the state-of-the-art OER electrocatalyst is IrO2. However, the extreme scarcity and high cost of iridium undermine its long-term practicality. Ruthenium and its oxides exhibit even greater OER activity, yet they suffer from poor stability under OER conditions. Stabilising ruthenium would be ideal, as it is the most affordable and more abundant platinum-group metal.1 One common strategy is to create mixed Ru–Ir oxides, although none have exceeded the activity of Ru or the stability of Ir.2,3 Other mixed oxides, such as perovskites, have been explored, but often lack stability under acidic OER conditions. Pyrochlores have been investigated for OER applications since the early 1980s,4 and has gained renewed interest in recent years due to its high tunability, enabling optimisation of both activity and stability.
Although several reviews on pyrochlores for OER applications have been published,5–7 this review specifically highlights the potential of ruthenate pyrochlores as OER electrocatalysts in acidic environments. It is intended as a practical guide for both new and experienced researchers. Significant findings have emerged since the most recent review, and new conclusions may be drawn from their aggregation. We begin by detailing the structure of pyrochlores, followed by an overview of the OER process and an exploration of pyrochlores as promising electrocatalysts. Based on the knowledge presented, we offer suggestions for future compositions and strategies tailored to OER applications. We also provide guidelines for examining the electrocatalytic activity and stability of these materials.
Pyrochlores are technologically relevant ternary metallic oxides with the general formula A2B2O7. They are sometimes expressed as A2B2O7−δ to reflect intrinsic oxygen vacancies, or as A2B2O6O′ since O and O′ occupy distinct crystallographic sites. Structurally, the pyrochlore can be derived from the fluorite lattice by removing one out of eight anions in a partially ordered manner, resulting in a halved unit cell parameter.8–10
The pyrochlore structure is named after the mineral pyrochlore, (Na,Ca)2Nb2O6(F,OH), which forms reddish-brown octahedral crystals, first discovered in 1826 in Larvik, Norway by F. Wöhler.11 These compounds are widely occurring, as nearly every element on the periodic table can be incorporated at different sites within the structure. This high degree of tunability accounts for their wide range of physical properties, spanning semiconducting to metallic, ferromagnetic, ferrimagnetic, ferroelectric, piezoelectric, luminescent, and ionically conductive behaviours.12,13 Due to this versatility, pyrochlores find use in numerous applications including nuclear waste immobilization, giant magnetoresistors, sensors, luminescence materials, (electro)catalysts, catalyst supports, solid electrolytes, thermal barrier coatings, and air-fired thick film resistors.8,10,13–15 Recently, pyrochlores have attracted growing interest as anode electrocatalyst materials for proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolysers, owing to their ability to stabilise the active Ru site within the structure.6
m (227), corresponding to a face-centered cubic Bravais lattice with point group m
m. It features a glide plane (d) parallel to the a-axis, a threefold inversion axis along [111], and a mirror plane in [110]. Both A- and B-site cations occupy inversion centers.16 As a cubic system, pyrochlores have a single lattice parameter a, typically between 9.5 and 11.5 Å.10
Each unit cell contains eight A2B2O6O′ formula units (Z = 8),15 totaling 88 atoms and illustrating the structural complexity.10 The unit cell (Fig. 2) includes four nonequivalent atom types occupying five distinct sites. Taking the B-site cation as the origin, the A- and B-sites (both with
m, D3d symmetry) occupy Wyckoff positions 16d
and 16c (0, 0, 0), respectively.14,17 Their multiplicities (16) follow from the eight molecules per unit cell and the stoichiometry (which is 2 for both the A- and B site).
![]() | ||
| Fig. 2 The pyrochlore unit cell with the teal colour representing Y, the grey colour representing Ru and red representing oxygen. | ||
The O and O′ atoms occupy 48f
with mm (C2v), and 8b
with
3m (Td) symmetry, respectively.17 The variable positional parameter x determines the M–O bond lengths and hence the A- and B-site coordination environments.17 The (111) XRD peak is particularly sensitive to the 48f position, and the refined x-value indicates if the pyrochlore is ideal, or a defect fluorite.18 The fifth crystallographic site, 8a
, is an unoccupied oxygen vacancy site (O′′).17
All oxygen atoms are coordinated tetrahedrally by cations.19 O in 48f is surrounded by two A- and two B-site cations, O′ in 8b is coordinated by four A-site cations, and the vacant 8a site is surrounded by four B-site cations (Fig. 3). While 8a and 8b have 48f as their only second-nearest oxygen neighbours, the 48f sites have all three oxygen sites as second-nearest neighbours, forming diffusion chains for vacancy-mediated oxygen transport.19
![]() | ||
| Fig. 3 Oxygen sites at 48f and 8b and the oxygen vacancy site at 8a in the pyrochlore unit cell. Red spheres represent oxygen; grey and teal represent Ru and Y, respectively. | ||
The A-site is typically occupied by larger, less charged cations (e.g., rare earths), while the B-site contains smaller, more highly charged transition metals. The A- and B-site coordination environments are illustrated in Fig. 4. Pyrochlores can be classified based on cation valence combinations: (2+, 5+) or (3+, 4+).17 Ruthenate pyrochlores can adopt both combinations due to the multiple valence states that Ru can adopt. (3+, 4+) variants are most common due to the abundance of A-cations adopting 3+ valence states, and these structures have been shown to be highly active towards the OER.20
A-site cations are eight-fold coordinated in distorted cubes (axially compressed scalenohedra), with shorter A–O′ (8b, ∼2.3 Å) and longer A–O (48f, ∼2.5 Å) bonds. B-site cations are six-fold coordinated by equidistant 48f oxygen atoms forming a trigonal antiprism.16,17 The B–O octahedra form a corner-sharing network, while A-site cations construct an interpenetrating anti-SiO2 lattice.21 This framework also accommodates defect pyrochlores such as A2B2O6 and AB2O6.16
Structurally, pyrochlores can be described as a network of corner-sharing BO6 octahedra, with A and O′ occupying the resulting cage-like voids.15 Notably, both A and O′ sites can be vacant without destabilizing the structure—facilitating cation and anion mobility.15 In A2Ru2O6O′, the RuO6 octahedra link in a zigzag configuration, forming Ru–O–Ru angles of 135°.21 Given a and x as the sole structural variables, cation–oxygen distances can be calculated as follows:22
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
![]() | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
Fuentes et al. support cation radius ratio as a stability predictor and caution against tolerance factors due to antisite defects in pyrochlores.24 Minervini and Grimes suggest atomistic simulations for better predictions, considering oxygen sublattice relaxation.23 Because the energy gap between pyrochlore and fluorite phases is small, especially near stability limits, disorder is common.19 For instance, RE2Hf2O7 can crystallize as either phase, depending on synthesis.26 Order–disorder transitions may arise from cationic or anionic effects.24
The positional parameter x, influenced by cation sizes and origin choice, also governs stability. With B as origin, stable pyrochlores exhibit 0.3125 ≤ x ≤ 0.375.17,22 For Y2Ru2O7, x = 0.333.16 As x → 0.375, the structure tends toward defect fluorite, with antisite cation disorder and Frenkel anion pairs.22 When A is the origin, the stability range is reported as 0.404 ≤ x ≤ 0.432.27 Within this range, BO6 polyhedra approach octahedral symmetry, a key factor in pyrochlore formation.27
To understand metal–nonmetal transitions in pyrochlore structures, it is emphasised that the classic Bloch–Wilson band theory does not hold for all crystalline solids.9 This is because band theory uses a single particle approximation and does not take into account electron–electron interactions. In this sense, band theory only holds when the bandwidth (W) is larger than the coulomb repulsion (U) and does not take into account electron correlations in systems with U > W.30 For these systems, other models are needed.
The Mott–Hubbard band model illustrates that as atoms move closer together, the lower Hubbard band (ionisation energy) and the upper Hubbard band (electron affinity) both broaden until they overlap at the band limit. This results in a sudden transition from an insulator to a metal, known as the Mott transition. Materials with band-gaps that involve the split Hubbard states are termed Mott-insulators. There is also a limited composition regime where materials remain insulating in the region where the upper- and lower Hubbard bands cross due to Anderson localisation (derived from randomness) of electronic states.21,31 One must also take note of the so-called charge-transfer insulators, characterised by a considerable oxygen-p character of the top-filled band instead of metal d character. For these kinds of materials the charge transfer energy (Δ) defines the band gap instead of U. Δ is the energy cost of transferring an O 2p electron to a metal d orbital.
Determining Mott transitions in pyrochlores is complex. Cox et al. identified a metal-to-semiconductor transition at y = 1.55 in Bi2−yGdyRu2O7.21 They found that Bi3+ has a smaller effective radius in the metallic state due to Bi 6s electron density being transferred into Ru 4d states.21 They observed an increased density of states (DOS) near the Fermi level, EF, with increasing Bi content via ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS), high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (HREELS) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), attributing the transition to both disorder (Anderson) and correlation (Hubbard) effects.21,32 Strong Bi–O′ covalent interactions (due to the Bi 6s2 lone pair) in bismuth ruthenate pyrochlores weakens the Bi–O interaction and enlarges the Ru–O–Ru bond angle, broadening the t2g band and allowing a Mott–Hubbard mechanism of electron delocalization.14 Hsu and Kasowski found that Bi and Pb 6s bands lie too deep to contribute to conduction.33 Instead, Bi 6p bands that lie closer to EF hybridize with Ru 4d states through framework O atoms. Although the Bi 6s band is 4 eV deeper than that of Pb, its 6p band lies 3 eV closer to EF than Pb's, resulting in twice the DOS at EF, while Y exhibits minimal DOS, aligning with its Mott insulating behaviour.33 Furthermore, Kanno et al. found that the conductivity of Bi2−xYxRu2O7 decreases as x increases, correlating with greater RuO6 distortion and a reduced Ru–O–Ru bond angle (from 139° at x = 0 to 129° at x = 2).34 The metal-to-semiconductor transition occurs between x = 1.2 and x = 1.4. In the metallic regime (x ≤ 1.2), Bi electrons contribute to the Ru 4d state, shortening the Ru–O bond length. No such variation is observed in the insulating regime.34 From these works it can be seen that the A-cation strongly influences the electronic properties of ruthenate pyrochlores, as Ru(IV) 4d electrons lie near the localized-itinerant boundary.14,21 For electrocatalysis, assessing 4d electron delocalisation is vital. Taira et al. found that magnetic behaviour (magnetic ordering in systems with localized electrons) can be a diagnostic tool.35 Ruthenium dioxide, with an undistorted rutile structure, has itinerant electrons and is metallic.21
In pyrochlores, the B-site is coordinated octahedrally (4), splitting d orbitals into higher eg and lower t2g energy states. However, Ru often adopts a trigonal antiprismatic (D3d) rather than octahedral (Oh) symmetry,17 splitting t2g into a filled
and empty a1g band.28 Structural differences impact the electronic structure: in Y2Ru2O7, the t2g and eg bands are 1 eV apart, while in Bi2Ru2O7, partial band overlap places EF in a DOS minimum.28 The t2g bandwidth in Y2Ru2O7 is also 25% narrower than in Bi2Ru2O7,28 though the role of these factors in its insulating behaviour remains uncertain.
Corner-sharing transition metal oxides can develop wide enough t2g bands for itinerant transport via M–O–M orbital overlap.21 Small M–O–M angles hinder this, as in Gd2Ru2O7 and Y2Ru2O7, where competition from acidic A-site cations restricts O 2p orbital availability. A Ru–O–Ru angle below 130° is linked with semiconducting character.36 ARuO3 perovskites feature a 180° angle and ruthenate pyrochlores around 135°.21 Y2Ru2O7 has an angle of 120°, and Bi2Ru2O7 133°.28 Cava questions whether small differences (e.g., 2° between metallic Bi and insulating Pr pyrochlores) fully explain the transition.28
Doping is a proven strategy to tune conductivity. For instance, Bi1.5−xCexSb1.5CuO7 shows increased conductivity with Ce content.25 Similarly, Sr-doping in Y2−ySryRu2O7 increases the Ru–O–Ru bond angle, enhances orbital overlap, and broadens the bandwidth, reducing electron correlations and closing the Mott–Hubbard gap.29 Electronic structure can also be tuned through structural modification. Liu et al. demonstrated that implanted MoOx species induce intermolecular charge transfer from RuO6, delocalizing Ru 4d electrons and enlarging the Ru–O–Ru bond angle—removing the band gap.37
A quanum-mechanical description of chemisorption of intermediates in catalysis is provided by the Newns–Anderson model40 and the related the Hammer–Nørskov d-band model.41 The Newns–Anderson model considers the interaction between adsorbate energy levels (ηa) and the adsorbent's DOS, defined by its energy center (ηd), bandwidth (W), and coupling strength (V).41 When W increases, the adsorbate state becomes a Lorentzian-shaped resonance within the adsorbent DOS, weakening antibonding contributions. Increasing V leads to a transition from resonance states to distinct bonding and antibonding states. If ηd shifts upward, bonding–antibonding splitting diminishes, and antibonding states become less populated enhancing adsorption.41
For transition metals, the d-band model offers a rationalization of trends in catalytic activity by a consideration of d-states alone, since their sp-bands are broad and uniformly filled. For example, when Cu d-states interact with nitrogen adsorbates, both bonding and antibonding states are filled, resulting in net repulsion. This repulsive interaction increases down the periodic table, explaining the weak adsorption on Au surfaces.41
For a recent discussion of current theoretical understanding of the OER at oxides more specifically, an extensive review has been provided by Jones et al.42
| 2H2O(l) → O2(g) + 4H+ + 4e− | (5) |
| ΔG = 4.92 eV = 474 kJ mol−1 |
One proposed pathway is the electrochemical oxide mechanism:43
| * + H2O(l) ⇌ OHad + H+ + e− | (6) |
| OHad ⇌ Oad + H+ + e− | (7) |
![]() | (8) |
![]() | ||
| Fig. 5 Illustration of a single layer of CUS (silver) and bridge (blue) sites; red spheres represent oxygen. | ||
The oxide path is an alternative mechanism:43
| * + H2O(l) ⇌ OHad + H+ + e− | (9) |
| 2OHad ⇌ Oad + H2O(l) + * | (10) |
![]() | (11) |
In both paths, O–O bond formation arises from coupling of adsorbed oxygen. However, DFT calculations show this step has a high reaction barrier on metal surfaces, making it kinetically unfavourable.46 An alternative is the mononuclear mechanism, where oxygen evolves via a hydroperoxo intermediate formed by nucleophilic attack of water on adsorbed oxygen.45,47,48 Rossmeisl and Nørskov identified this step as rate-limiting.46 They computed the free energies of each elementary step using:46,49
| ΔG(U, pH, pH2 = 1 bar, T) = ΔG0 + ΔGW + ΔGU + ΔGfield + ΔGpH | (12) |
| * + H2O(l) ⇌ OHad + H+ + e− | (13) |
![]() | (14) |
![]() | (15) |
![]() | (16) |
ΔG4 = ΔGO2 − ΔGOOHad − eU + kBT ln aH+ |
For a perfect OER electrocatalyst, all four steps would have equal free energies (1.23 eV), totaling the theoretical value of 4.92 eV. However, in practice, one or two steps dominate due to larger energy barriers. While lowering the energy of these slow steps seems desirable, DFT studies by Nørskov's group revealed that the binding energies of OER intermediates scale linearly with one another, hindering independent optimization.46 Man et al. showed that the difference between the binding energies OHad and OOHad is consistently 3.2 eV across oxides, implying that variations in overpotential from oxide to oxide are determined by the adsorption energy of oxygen. It also implies a universal overpotential limitation.49 This relation is illustrated in Fig. 6, where an optimum oxygen binding energy of 1.67 eV results in all steps being downhill at 1.23 V, whereas a less optimal value of 2.3 eV places step 3 as rate-limiting a value relevant for pyrochlores (see Section 6.2).
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| Fig. 6 (a) Free energy diagram for an oxygen binding energy of 1.67 eV, corresponding to the computed binding energy for iridium oxide.45 Curves for 0.0 V, 1.23 V, and 1.78 V, are shown as indicated. pH = 0. (b) Free energy diagram for an oxygen binding energy of 2.3 eV, corresponding to the computed binding energy that gives the minimum overpotential.45 Curves for 0.0 V, 1.23 V, and 1.55 V, are shown as indicated. pH = 0. All curves were calculated from equations provided by Rossmeisl et al.45 | ||
Although breaking scaling relations appears beneficial, some studies show this does not always reduce overpotentials.50 Since these relations are thermodynamic, Exner et al. argued that including kinetics may yield different design principles.51 Nonetheless, Halck et al. demonstrated that incorporating Ni or Co into RuO2 introduces proton donor–acceptor bridge sites that help decouple OHad and OOHad energies.52 Introducing a hydrogen donor/acceptor has been widely used to circumvent adsorption scaling relations.53
Among the intermediates, Oad is double-bonded, while OHad and OOHad are single-bonded to the surface. As a result, Oad exhibits greater sensitivity to surface chemistry.45 The OER rate thus correlates with the oxygen adsorption strength, producing a volcano-type relationship. Weak oxygen binding makes the formation of OHad (step 13) rate-limiting; strong binding shifts this to OOHad formation (step 15). Thus, oxygen binding energy serves as an effective descriptor for OER activity. Nørskov et al. also noted that oxygen evolution on metal surfaces requires an oxidized surface (Fig. 7).46 In subsequent DFT work, rutile RuO2 and IrO2 were shown to outperform their reduced (metallic) counterparts due to their optimal O and OH binding energies.45
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| Fig. 7 OER mechanism as described by Rossmeisl and Nørskov.46 Silver: metal surface; red: oxygen; white: hydrogen. When a potential is applied, water molecules dissociate and form OHad (eqn (13)). Without a further increase in potential, a proton is split off into solution and an electron to the electrode (eqn (14)). After this, the coverage of Oad increases until no new OHad forms. If the potential is high enough, water molecules will adsorb on Oad, forming OOHad (eqn (15)) and eventually evolve O2 (eqn (16)). | ||
To advance electrocatalyst design, structure–property relationships must be better understood. Many studies introduce OER descriptors, properties correlating with activity, to aid catalyst screening. Often, plotting activity versus a descriptor forms a volcano plot. One example is the optimal filling of the eg orbital,54 linked to the binding strength of OER intermediates highlighting the central role of adsorption.
Interest in LOM grew when certain perovskites outperformed others predicted to be optimal by volcano plots based on the adsorbate evolution mechanism (AEM).54,58 While the AEM-based volcano is largely universal for perovskites, LOM depends on A-site identity.57 Furthermore, it has been validated through both DFT simulations59,60 and isotope labeling experiments.61 Rong et al. proposed that LOM proceeds via reversible formation of surface oxygen vacancies (VO), as shown below:57,60
| OHad ⇌ (VO + OOad) + H+ + e− | (17) |
| (VO + OOad) + H2O ⇌ O2 + (VO + OHad) + H+ + e− | (18) |
| (VO + OHad) + H2O ⇌ (HO-site,ad + OHad) + H+ + e− | (19) |
| (HO-site,ad + OHad) ⇌ OHad + H+ + e− | (20) |
As in AEM, the first step involves OH adsorption. Deprotonation triggers lattice O to participate, forming OOad and leaving behind VO. O–O bond formation occurs via O migration to a bridge site. Oxygen is evolved in the second step, and OH− refills the vacancy in step 3, protonating adjacent lattice oxygen due to the B-sites limited ability to donate electrons to undercoordinated surface oxygens. When bulk oxygen vacancies exist, LOM can bypass earlier steps and proceed from eqn (19).60
Tuning the B-site valence in ternary oxides can promote LOM by facilitating VO formation, which becomes thermodynamically favourable as the B–O bond weakens.60 Lower catalyst stability increases surface protonation, introducing new LOM-specific scaling relationships, particularly between OHad and OOad (with a typical ΔG ≈ 1.4 eV for La-based perovskites),57 in contrast to the OHad–OOHad pair in AEM. Some variants that also involve double-bonded O intermediates have been suggested as well.62 Notably, LOM dominates both the weak-binding leg and the top of the volcano trend in some systems.57 Finally, it is important to note that proton and electron transfers are not necessarily always concerted.
| Ru4+OH− → Ru5+O2− + H+ + e− | (21) |
| Ru5+O2− ⇌ Ru4+O− | (22) |
| Ru4+O− + H2O → Ru4+OOH− + H+ + e− | (23) |
| 2Ru4+OOH− → 2Ru4+OH− + O2↑ | (24) |
![]() | ||
| Fig. 8 Proposed cyclic Ru–O intermediate in the OER on ruthenate pyrochlores. Adapted from Horowitz et al.4,63 | ||
At higher pH (1.5 < pH < 3.3), involving O′ proton donors:
| Ru4+O2− + Pb2+OH2 → Ru5+O2− + Pb2+OH− + H+ + e− | (25) |
| Ru5+O2− ⇌ Ru4+O− | (26) |
| Pb2+OH− + Ru4+O− + H2O → Ru4+OO2− + Pb2+OH2 + H+ + e− | (27) |
| 2Ru4+OO2− → 2Ru4+O2− + O2↑ | (28) |
These steps are widely cited as the most detailed OER mechanisms for Ru/Ir pyrochlores.65–69 Prakash et al. also studied Pb2Ru2O6.5, reporting that both surface and bulk contribute to OER, based on cyclic voltammograms (CVs) correlated with BET surface area.70 Their mechanism suggests first-order dependence on [OH−] in alkaline media (pH 11–14), with contributions from both Ru and Pb oxidation (Fig. 9).
![]() | ||
| Fig. 9 OER mechanism on Pb–Ru pyrochlore. S denotes an active site.70 | ||
In a later study,71 they reaffirmed first-order [OH−] dependence and proposed that the second electron transfer is rate-limiting. Their model includes adjacent Ru–OH sites on the (111) surface and the formation of a seven-coordinate Ru5+ (Fig. 10), similar to a previously reported additional electron-transfer step preceding OOH formation.47 Unlike Horowitz's single-site model, OH and O are adsorbed on adjacent Ru sites. Sardar et al. investigated Bi2Ru2O7 and suggested that the mechanism resembles that of RuO2 or IrO2, though direct comparison is difficult due to structural differences.66 Parrondo et al. studied lead-based pyrochlores (Ru, Ir, Os) and proposed an AEM-type pathway involving oxygen intermediates bonded to B-sites. OER activity was found to increase with Ru content, attributed to stronger B–O bonding. The mechanism involves four electron transfers, with O–O bond formation and proton removal as rate-limiting steps (see Fig. 11).72 Several studies report AEM-type mechanisms for Ru- and Ir-based pyrochlores.20,29,73–75 Kim et al. proposed an AEM pathway involving a transient Ru6+ species in acidic media for Y2Ru2O7:
| Ru+4 + 2H2O → Ru+5OH + H2O + H+ + e− | (29) |
| Ru+5OH + H2O → Ru+6O + H2O + H+ + e− | (30) |
| Ru+6O + H2O → Ru+5OOH + H+ + e− | (31) |
| Ru+5OOH → Ru+4 + O2 + H+ + e− | (32) |
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| Fig. 10 Detailed OER mechanism with formation of seven-coordinate Ru5+. Used with permission of IOP Publishing Limited, from Journal of the Electrochemical Society, Prakash et al.86, 1948; permission conveyed through Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. | ||
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| Fig. 11 OER mechanism on lead ruthenate pyrochlores in alkaline media, redrawn with permission from Parrondo et al.72 Copyright Royal Society of Chemistry 2015. | ||
Feng et al. applied this mechanism to Y1.85Ba0.15Ru2O7−y,68 while earlier proposing an electrochemical oxide path for Zn-doped analogues,67 involving adjacent adsorbed O atoms forming O–O bonds. Zhou et al. presented a related mechanism on mixed A-site pyrochlores (Fig. 12).76 Lattice oxygen involvement (LOM-type mechanisms) in pyrochlores was suggested more recently,62,77–79 and remains less frequently reported than surface-adsorbed oxygen pathways. It is likely that different pyrochlores follow different mechanisms, but consensus is lacking. Further in situ studies, such as isotope labelling with differential electrochemical mass spectrometry (DEMS), are needed to confirm LOM activity, as demonstrated by Abbott et al.75
![]() | ||
| Fig. 12 Illustrated OER pathway in a Bi/Er co-doped pyrochlore. Redrawn from Zhou et al.76 | ||
| Pyrochlore | Synthesis method, calcination temperature | Particle size (nm) | Surface area (m2 g−1) | Overpotential (mV at 10 mA cm−2) | Electrolyte |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pb2(Ru2−xPbx)O6.5 | Alkaline solution | — | 50–200 | 140 | 3 M KOH |
| Bi2(Ru2−xBix)O6.54,63 | |||||
| Pb2(M2−xPbx)O7−y (M = Ru or Ir)64 | Direct solid-state, 850 °C | — | — | 0.72 V vs. Hg/HgSO4 | 2.5 M H2SO4 |
| Pb2Ru2O6.570 | Alkaline solution | 6 | 1 M KOH | ||
| Bi2Ru2O784 | Solid state, 1000 °C | 2.5 M H2SO4 | |||
| Pb2(Ir2−xPbx)O7−y65 | Solid-sate, 825 °C | −20 mV vs. SSE | KOH | ||
| Bi2Ru2O7 and Pb2Ru2O6.585 | Solid state | 1 M KOH | |||
| Pb2(Ru2−xPbx)O6.571 | Alkaline solution | — | 35–55 | — | 5.5 M KOH |
| Pb2Ru2O6.586 | Alkaline solution | 1 M KOH | |||
| Bi2Ru2O783 | Pechini | 500 | 2 | — | 1 M KOH |
| Bi2Ir2O766 | Hydrothermal | 10 | 46 | 370 | 1 M H2SO4 |
| (Na0.33Ce0.67)2Ru2O787 | Hydrothermal | 38 | 60–80 | 214 | MEA |
| Pb2Ru2O6.5 | Alkaline solution and/or solid-state | 50–100 | 100 | 210 | 0.1 M KOH |
| Bi2.4Ru1.6O772 | 7.8 | 370 | |||
| Bi2Ir2O7 | Hydrothermal | 20–50 | 14.8 | Did not reach | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Pb2Ir2O6.573 | |||||
| Bi2Ru2O788 | Alkaline solution | — | — | — | 0.1 M KOH |
| Pb2Ru2O6.5 | Sol–gel (CA), 650 °C | ≤200 | — | 410 | 0.1 M KOH |
| Sm2Ru2O774 | — | 448 | |||
| BiYIr2O6.5+x89 | Adams fusion | 10–200 | 40 | — | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Y2(Ru2−xYx)O7−y77 | Sol–gel (CA), 1050 °C | 200 | 4.26 | 490 | 0.1 M KOH |
| Y2Ru2O7−δ20 | Sol–gel (A), 1000 °C | >200 | 7.22 | 190 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Y2Ir2O790 | Sol–gel (CA), 1000 °C | 150 | 7.3 | — | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Tl2Rh2O780 | Sol–gel type | <200 | — | 395 | 0.1 M KOH |
| Y2(Ru1.6Y0.4)O7−y91 | Sol–gel + porogen | 10 | 33.3 | 250 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Pr2Ir2O792 | Sol–gel (CA), 900 °C | >200 | 1.55 | 295 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Y1.85Zn0.15Ru2O7−δ67 | Sol–gel (CA), 1050 °C | >300 | 4.2 | 291 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Yb2Ru2O7 | Spray-freeze | 83 | — | 21 mA cm−2 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Gd2Ru2O7 | Freeze-dry, 1200 °C | 173 | 19.9 mA cm−2 | ||
| Nd2Ru2O775 | 350 | 12.1 mA cm−2 at 350 mV | |||
| Tl2Ru2O7 + surface PO43− (ref. 93) | Sol–gel, 1200 °C | <200 | 5.24 | 270 | 0.1 M KOH |
| Y2Ru2−xCoxO794 | Sol–gel, 1350 °C + in situ exsolution of Co | 500 | 250 | 0.1 M KOH | |
| Y1.85Ba0.15Ru2O7−δ68 | Pechini, 1050 °C | >100 | 16.4 | 278 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Pb2Ru2O7−x95 | Alkaline solution | 70–140 | 500 | 0.6 M NaCl and NaClO4 | |
| Pb2Ru2O7−x96 | Alkaline solution, varying temperatures and atmospheres | 105 ± 35 | 85 | 200 | 0.1 M KOH |
| Y1.75Ca0.25Ru2O7−δ97 | Pechini, 1100 °C | >300 | 7.9 | 275 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Y2Ru2O7−δ98 | Polymer entrapment flash pyrolysis (PEPF), 550 °C | 40 | 14.8 | 280 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Pyrochlore | Synthesis method, calcination temperature | Particle size (nm) | Surface area (m2 g−1) | Overpotential (mV at 10 mA cm−2) | Electrolyte | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Y2Ru2O7−δ | Sol–gel (CA), 1000 °C | >100 | 28.8 | 360 | 0.5 M H2SO4 | ||
| Y1.8Cu0.2Ru2O7−δ | 7.9 | 360 | |||||
| Y1.8Co0.2Ru2O7−δ | 9.0 | n.a. | |||||
| Y1.8Ni0.2Ru2O7−δ | 12.8 | n.a. | |||||
| Y1.8Fe0.2Ru2O7−δ62 | 13.9 | 410 | |||||
| Y2Ru2O7 | Sol–gel (CA), 1000 °C | >100 | 2.7 | 331 | 0.1 M HCLO4 | ||
| Nd2Ru2O7 | 2.3 | 346 | |||||
| Gd2Ru2O7 | 700 °C (for Bi) | 2.0 | 360 | ||||
| Bi2Ru2O799 | 4.4 | 358 | |||||
| Dy2RuMnO7 | Sol–gel (CA), 900 °C | 60 | 4.5 | — | 0.1 M KOH | ||
| Ho2RuMnO7 | |||||||
| Er2RuMnO7100 | |||||||
| Yb2(Ru0.58Ir0.42)2O7101 | SF-FD, 1020 °C | 100 | — | 250 | 0.1 M HCLO4 | ||
| Nd2Ru2O7 | Sol–gel (CA), 1000 °C | 100–200 | — | 310 | 0.1 MHClO4 | ||
| Sm2Ru2O7 | 350 | ||||||
| Er2Ru2O7 | — | ||||||
| Yb2Ru2O7102 | — | ||||||
| Y2Ru1.9Mn0.1O7−δ | Sol–gel, 1050 °C | >200 | 7.02 | 256 | 0.5 M H2SO4 | ||
| Y2Ru1.9Fe0.1O7−δ103 | 7.14 | 273 | |||||
| Y1.7Sr0.3Ru2O729 | Sol–gel (CA), 900 °C | >200 | 4.98 | 264 | 0.5 M H2SO4 | ||
| Lu2Ir2O7104 | Hydrothermal | — | — | 305 | 0.1 M HClO4 | ||
| Y2Ru2O7−δFx79 | Sol–gel (CA) + fluorination | >50 | 90.08 (ECSA) | 235 | 0.5 M H2SO4 | ||
| (CaNa)2Ir2O6·nH2O | Hydrothermal | 10–40 | 62.7 | 8.31 mA cm−2 | MEA | ||
| Ca2Ir2O6·nH2O | 26.2 | 5.42 mA cm−2 | |||||
| (CaNa)2IrRuO6·nH2O69 | 33.5 | 8.24 mA cm−2 at 270 mV (BET) | |||||
| Bi2Ru2O7105 | Sol–gel, 1050 °C | >900 | — | 535 | 0.1 M KOH | ||
| Y2Ru2O7−δ78 | Sol–gel autocombustion, 1100 °C, quenching | <100 | 15.6 | 241 | 0.1 M HCLO4 | ||
| Y2Ir2O7106 | Adams funsion | 50 | 22 | 417 | 0.5 M H2SO4 | ||
| Pr1.8Zn0.2Ir2O7 | Hydrothermal | 119.7 | 5 | 340 | 0.1 M HCLO4 | ||
| Lu1.8Zn0.2Ir2O7107 | 654.17 | 9.2 | 331 | ||||
| Ho2Ru2O7108 | Electrospinning, 900 °C | 50 | 8.85 | 280 | 0.1 M HCLO4 | ||
| Y2MnRuO7109 | Sol–gel (CA), 1000 °C | 50 | — | 300 | 0.1 M HCLO4 | ||
| Y2Ru1.2Ir0.8O7110 | Sol–gel (CA), 1000 °C | >300 | — | 220 | 0.5 M H2SO4 | ||
| BixEr2−xRu2O776 | Sol–gel (CA) with perchloric acid, 1000 °C | — | — | 180 | 0.1 M HCLO4 | ||
| Bi2Ru2O7 on Bi2Ti2O7111 | Alkaline solution + epitaxial growth | 100 | — | 270 | 0.1 M KOH | ||
| Pr2RuIrO7112 | Amino-acid aided synthesis, 1050 °C | 400–500 | — | 350 | 1 M KOH | ||
| Bi1.68Co0.32 | Sol–gel auto-combustion, 950 °C | — | — | 300 | 1 M KOH | ||
| [Nb1.4Co0.6]O7−δ113 | |||||||
| Pb2[Ru2−xPbx]O7−δ114 | Low-temperature pyrolysis cation exchange resin (CER), 350 °C | 40–100 | 44.2 | 174 | 0.1 M HCLO4 | ||
| Pyrochlore | Synthesis method, calcination temperature | Particle size (nm) | Surface area (m2 g−1) | Overpotential (mV at 10 mA cm−2) | Electrolyte |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Y2Ru2−xTixO7115 | Sol–gel (CA), 900 °C | 100–200 | — | 229 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Y1.75Co0.25Ru2O7−δ116 | Sol–gel, 1100 °C, ball-milled | 400 | — | 275 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Y2MnRuO7117 | Citrate, 900 °C | 60 | 0.6 (incl. vulcan, ECSA) | 270 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Co2Sb2O7118 | Solid-state, 450 °C | 100–500 | 68.7 | 288 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Y2Ru2O7−δ + MoOx modifiers37 | Sol–gel + porogen wet chemical peroxone | >100 | 11.58 | 240 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Y2Ru2O7 with P-doped Ru on the surface119 | Sol–gel (CA), exsolution and pyrolysis | — | 186.1 | 232 | 1 M KOH |
| Pr2Ru2O7120 | Sol–gel (CA), 950 °C | >500 | 6.64 | 213 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Ho2Ru2O7121 | Electrospinning, 900 °C | 50 | — | 280 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Y1.6Pb0.4Ru2O7−δ122 | Sol–gel (CA) + porogen | — | 18.77 | 195 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| NaxGd2−xRu2O7−δ123 | Sol–gel (CA), 900 °C | 110 | 4.07 | 260 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Mn2P2O7 and graphene nanosheets composite124 | Hydrothermal, 400 °C + ultrasonication | 12.98 | — | 240 | 1 M KOH |
| Y2Ru2O7 support for NiFe/Ru-PS125 | Sol–gel (CA) | — | 100 | 241 | 1 M KOH |
| Ln2Ru2O7, Ln = Sm to Lu126 | Sol–gel (CA) + perchloric acid, 900 °C or 1050 °C | 70 | 6 | 218–240 | 0.1 M HCLO4 |
| Y2Ru1.9Sr0.1O7127 | Sol–gel (CA), 1000 °C | 50 | 9.75 | 228 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Y2Ru2O7S0.17128 | Hydrothermal | 30 | 12.91 | 237 | 0.5 M H2SO4 |
| Y2Ru2−xPdxO7129 | Sol–gel (CA) | 200–300 | 260 | 1 M KOH |
The earliest pyrochlores used for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) featured Pb or Bi at the A-site (Bi2Ru2O7 and Pb2Ru2O7).4,63,64,66,70–73,83–85 Ruthenium-deficient variants, where Pb or Bi partially occupy B-sites, have shown higher OER activity than noble metals.21 These materials have primarily been studied in alkaline media, where they outperform their performance in acidic environments. Most early studies also report better OER than ORR activity. In 2017, research interest shifted toward Y-containing pyrochlores.20,67,77,89,90,97,98 Yttrium-based ruthenate pyrochlores demonstrate good performance in both acidic and alkaline media.20,74 According to Tables 1–3, Y is among the most frequently used A-site cations in OER-active pyrochlores.
Liu et al. reported increasing activity with increasing A-site radii from Yb to Nd (Fig. 13).102 Similar trends were observed with A-cations from Ho (1.015 Å) to Pr (1.126 Å).92,112 Celorrio et al. also found Dy2RuMnO7 to outperform smaller-radius analogues.100
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| Fig. 13 A schematic illustration of the rigid band structures for RuO2, Yb2Ru2O7 and Nd2Ru2O7 redrawn with permission from Liu et al.102 Copyright Springer Nature 2021. | ||
Conversely, Abbott et al. observed increasing activity with decreasing A-cation size in A2B2O7 (A = Nd, Gd, Yb; B = Ru, Ir), following Yb → Gd → Nd.75 Hubert et al. reported similar findings, although differences were marginal among Y, Nd, and Gd.99 Bi-containing pyrochlores performed worse, but this may stem from Bi's unique electronic configuration rather than size alone.99 Yin et al. also found activity decreased with increased size from Nd to Ho.121
Early work by ten Kortenaar et al. showed the trend Pb (1.29) > Eu (1.066) > Nd (1.109) > Bi (1.17), with no clear correlation to A-site radius.65 Recently, Guo et al. performed a comprehensive study across lanthanide ruthenate pyrochlores (Sm–Lu) and found Tb in the A-site to be most active.126 Larger-radius cations (La, Ce, Pr, Nd) couldnt form phase-pure pyrochlores. They reported an activity increase with increasing radius up to Tb, then a decline (Gd, Eu, Sm).126 In other words, they found a volcano-type correlation. This shows that certain elements in the lanthanide series may appear to have increasing activities as the radius increases while others will show the opposite trend. This could potentially explain conflicting trends in the literature.
However, not all results align with this trend. Shang et al. found that Nd2Ir2O7 and Gd2Ir2O7 outperformed Tb2Ir2O7, despite Tb having a lower I4, though Pr2Ir2O7 remained the best.92 If I4 were a reliable predictor, Ce in the A-site should show high activity due to its low I4. However, Ce predominantly exists in the +4 state and has only been synthesised as (Na0.33Ce0.67)2Ru2O7, likely to maintain charge balance.87 Overall, no universal correlation exists between A-site size or I4 and OER activity. Nevertheless, both clearly influence activity, likely through other size-dependent or electronic structure-related properties.
In IrO2, electrons adopt a low-spin state, leading to filled t2g and empty eg orbitals in a perfect octahedron.90,92 However, some report distorted octahedra and a splitting of the t2g
orbitals, resulting in filled u′
subbands and a half filled e′′
subband (Fig. 14).73,131 Sun et al. observed a shoulder near EF in the XPS valence band spectrum of IrO2 and Bi2Ir2O7, attributed to this splitting.73 Shih et al. and Shang et al. also reported this effect in iridate pyrochlores and linked the enhanced OER activity to the single-electron-filled e′′ subband.90,92
![]() | ||
| Fig. 14 An illustration of the orbital filling in IrO2 and Y2Ir2O7.90 | ||
Conversely, Sun et al. suggested that SOC is not present in distorted IrO6 octahedra, causing the disappearance of the
subband.73 They correlated this to the superior activity of Pb2Ir2O6.5 over Bi2Ir2O7 and IrO2.73 Nonetheless, they observed further splitting of
, leaving one half-filled orbital. This e′′ orbital in pyrochlores may thus mimic the half-filled eg orbital in perovskites/TMOs, known for optimal binding strength in OER catalysis.54 This so-called “single electron in a single orbital” (SESO) configuration helps explain the generally high OER activity of iridate pyrochlores but offers limited guidance for designing new compositions. Additionally, strong electron correlations in some RE2Ir2O7 pyrochlores lead to
splitting into upper and lower Hubbard bands.92 As the RE radius increases, electron correlations weaken, shrinking this gap and enhancing conductivity (Fig. 15).92 Therefore, pyrochlores may become more conductive as the A-site increases in size.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 15 A schematic illustration of the band structures of Ir 5d orbitals of rare-earth (RE) iridate pyrochlores and the corresponding phase diagram. Used with permission of John Wiley & Sons, from ref. 92; permission conveyed through Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. | ||
In some cases, increasing the A-site radius reduces B–O bond strength, which corresponds to higher oxygen vacancy concentrations.7,132 Liu et al. used this reasoning to ascribe increased OER activity to larger A-site cations (Fig. 13).102 In contrast, Shang et al. reported a positive correlation between Ir–O bond covalency and OER activity, associated with increasing A-cation size (Fig. 15).92 Other studies found that stronger Ru–O bonds, occurring with decreasing A-site radius, enhance activity.99
There is clear disagreement on whether longer or shorter B–O bonds favour OER activity. The majority of the publications on pyrochlore OER electrocatalysts claim shorter bonds (stronger p–d hybridization) lead to increased OER activity,20,73,74,92,93,95,96,100,104,108,117 while some find the opposite to be true.20,75,78,99,102,106,120,121
Changes in A-site cation also influence the relative positions of the Ru 4d/Ir 5d and O 2p band centers. DFT calculations have showed that increased distortion in IrO6 octahedra leads to broader d-band widths and thus greater Ir 5d–O 2p band overlap.73 Ru–O bond lengths likewise affect the d-band center in ruthenate pyrochlores, though conflicting reports exist: some find that shorter Ru–O bonds downshift the d-band center,20,117 while others claim that longer bonds cause this downshift and optimise the binding energy of oxygen intermediates.120
Larger overlap of Ru–O/Ir–O orbitals are said to increase the O 2p band center converting from AEM to LOM.104 Higher O 2p band centers allow more of the d-band to enter into the O 2p band.104 A downshift of the d-band center in acidic media may lead to increased OER activity.104
Electronegativity also affects OER activity independently of ionic radius. Yan et al. substituted Ho (for which they provide an electronegativity 1.377) for Y (for which they provide an electronegativity 1.291) in Y2Ru2O7 and attributed improved activity to the higher electronegativity of Ho, which resulted in larger Ru–O–Ru bond angles and shorter Ru–O bond lengths.108 The reader is again informed that the electronegativities of Ho and Y according to the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics are 1.23 and 1.22, respectively.133 However, as with most trends, there are exceptions. Hubert et al. reported that Bi2Ru2O7 showed significantly lower OER activity than Y2Ru2O7, Nd2Ru2O7, and Gd2Ru2O7, despite Bis electronegativity (2.02) being closer to that of Ru (2.2) than the others.99
Iwakura et al. found that film-type Bi2Ru2O7 benefits from preconditioning, unlike its pellet counterpart.81 The enhanced OER activity following KOH pretreatment was attributed to the formation of higher valence Ru species rather than increased surface area. However, this improvement was not observed in acidic electrolyte (0.5 M H2SO4).81
Initial high currents may also arise from catalyst dissolution and surface reconstruction.99 Hubert et al. reported A-site and Ru dissolution across all A2Ru2O7 pyrochlores investigated.99 Indeed, in many cases, the OER activity of Ru- and Ir-based pyrochlores is linked to the leaching of A-site cations, which yields more active (often amorphous) BOx surface structures.89,106 These reconstructed surfaces can also become more stable over time.106 Further discussion is provided in Section 5.3.
moves to higher pO2 since oxygen vacancies are more easily formed and a higher oxygen pressure is required to fill them.134 Multiple studies confirm that A-site doping increases Ru valence and oxygen vacancies, which both enhance OER activity.67,68,97,116
Some exceptions exist: Shang et al. observed reduced Ru valence post-doping,123 while others found only Ru oxidation and no oxygen vacancy formation,29,107 or only oxygen vacancies and no valence state change.62 The latter maintained unchanged Ru valence by using low dopant concentrations (10%), though other studies reported oxidation even at 7.5%.67,68 This suggests that controlling dopant concentration can modulate the charge compensation mechanism. Regardless, most studies report enhanced Ru–O or Ir–O covalency following acceptor doping.29,62,76,107,116,122,123
Kuznetsov et al. observed that oxygen vacancy concentration increases with less negative formation enthalpy of the dopants binary oxide (weaker M–O bonds), facilitating lattice oxygen removal.62 They also found stronger Ru–O covalency with less electronegative, more ionic dopants due to inductive effects.62
Table 4 summarizes OER performance for several A-site-doped Y2Ru2O7 pyrochlores synthesised via sol–gel and tested in 0.5 M H2SO4. Surface areas range from 4.2 to 18.8 m2 g−1.
A clear correlation is observed between A-site dopant radius and OER activity: activity increases with dopant size up to a point, then declines (e.g., Ba). A similar volcano-type relation may exist with dopant concentration, constrained by solubility and lattice diffusion. The correlation between dopant size and amount of dopant is reasonable since larger dopants expand the lattice,126 easing incorporation and allowing higher substitution levels without phase segregation.
Both larger A-site dopants and a higher concentration of these acceptor dopants can increase the oxygen vacancy concentration. Thus, enhanced activity may stem from increased oxygen vacancies (providing more active sites135) and electronic structure tuning. DFT studies show that acceptor doping shifts the metal d-band center upward (narrowing the d–p gap), improving both OER and ORR activity.136 Oxygen vacancies also enhance Ru 4d–O 2p overlap62 and raise the O 2p band toward EF, increasing the DOS around EF.96 Strain effects may also contribute to activity: lattice expansion shifts metal d-states upward, increasing surface reactivity and modulating intermediate binding via d-state alignment with EF.137
Activity declines at high dopant radius/concentration could reflect a critical vacancy threshold beyond which structural degradation occurs, forming ABO3 or BO2 phases.5,96 Additionally, caution must be exercised when assigning dopant positions (A-site vs. B-site), as their precise location can be difficult to determine, even with structural refinements.138 Therefore, especially at higher dopant concentrations, incorporation may occur at both the A- and B-sites, altering the perceived activity. It should also be noted that some studies report no vacancy formation upon doping.29,107,139
Studies reporting improved performance typically find an optimal dopant concentration near 50% ± 10%. This is feasible due to the similar ionic radii of Ru and Ir, enabling continuous solid solutions.71 Pittkowski et al. identified peak performance at 45–55% Ru content, supported by DFT predictions.101 Liu et al. reported peak activity at 40% Ir, with a decline at 50%.110 Similarly, Matsumoto et al. found optimal OER activity at 50% Ir content.112
Pittkowski et al. linked activity to shorter Ru–Ir bond distances,101 while Matsumoto et al. attributed performance gains to strengthened interactions between RuO6 and IrO6 octahedra via shared oxygen atoms.112 Some studies noted a decrease in average Ru/Ir valence, linked to enhanced stability,110,112 while others found valence to be composition-independent101 or increased (though this may have resulted from A-site doping).69 DFT simulations showed that the synergistic effect of Ru and Ir alters the d-band center, accelerating the potential-limiting step involving oxyhydroxide formation.110 They also reported a widened gap between the O 2p band center and EF, suppressing the lattice oxygen mechanism (LOM) and promoting stability.110
Isovalent B-site doping has also been explored using Ti.115 Acceptor dopants, including Co,94 Fe, Mn,103,109,117 Mg, Ca, Sr,127 and Pd,129 have also been extensively studied. Some of these dopants have also been used in the A-site (Section 3.4). Dopant site assignment is usually governed by precursor ratios, suggesting many of these elements are soluble on both sites. However, solubility is generally lower for B-site doping: for example, Sr substitution is often limited to 5%,127 whereas A-site doping permits up to 15%.29 A 5% limit appears common for divalent B-site dopants.103,129 Dopants with similar charge or radius to Ru can be incorporated in larger amounts.71,109,115 However, as mentioned, caution should be exercised when definitively assigning site occupation as stoichiometry alone cannot determine whether a dopant resides on the A- or B-site without comprehensive structural analysis.138
Acceptor B-site doping requires charge compensation. Han et al. and Lee et al. observed both oxygen vacancies and Ru4+/Ru5+ mixed valence in Mn-, Fe-, and Pd-doped Y2Ru2O7.103,129 Other studies report only Ru oxidation,109 or no changes.127 In these cases, stronger B–O covalency is commonly cited as a key factor for enhanced activity.115,117,127 For example, Zhang et al. found Y2Ru1.9Sr0.1O7 to show improved performance, attributed to lattice distortion and greater metal–oxygen hybridization.127 As with A-site doping, it is shown that distortion/strain can alter the relative positions of d- and p-bands leading to improved OER performance. Beyond Ru, Parrondo et al. showed that B-cations with more d-electrons or those from period 6 exhibited reduced OER activity.72
| Technique | Information obtained | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Photoluminescence (PL) | Emission intensity (e.g., 400 nm) correlated to VO | 129 |
| Iodometry | Quantitative measurement of VO | 118 |
| Normalized electron spin resonance (ESR)/electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) | Detection of oxygen vacancy signals (g = 2.002); qualitative/semi-quantitative analysis | 29, 78 and 116 |
| Temp.-programmed reduction (TPR, 700 °C, H2 atmosphere) | Total oxygen content inferred from evolved water (detected with moisture meter) during reduction | 88 |
| Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) | Oxygen release tracked via sample mass loss under varying atmospheres; can be coupled with MS for composition analysis | 75 and 103 |
| XANES | Probes oxidation states and indirectly reveals oxygen non-stoichiometry | 91 |
| Neutron diffraction | Structural resolution of oxygen site occupancy | 139 |
| Hall measurements | Carrier concentration correlates with oxygen vacancy-induced free electrons | 78 |
| XPS (O 1s spectra) | Surface defect states; interpretation varies depending on fitting and assignments | 62, 67, 79, 95, 102, 108, 128 and 129 |
| Raman spectroscopy | Intensity changes (e.g., 700 cm−1 peak) associated with [VO] | 119 |
| Binding energy (eV) | Assigned species | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| ∼528.4–529.5 | Lattice oxygen (M–O bonds) | 62, 67, 79, 95, 102, 108, 128 and 129 |
| 530.15–531.0 | Oxygen vacancies or near-vacancy lattice oxygen | 62, 79, 95 and 129 |
| 530.5–531.4 | Hydroxyl or adsorbed oxygen species | 67, 79, 102, 128 and 129 |
| 531.9–533.5 | Surface oxygen, adventitious species | 62, 79, 102 and 108 |
In some studies, carbon was incorporated as a conductive additive to improve pyrochlore conductivity,20,67,68,97,99 while others used inks without added carbon.62,75,101,102 This makes it especially important to use intrinsic, rather than extrinsic, metrics when comparing catalyst activity. Conductivity in the catalyst layer influences the ECSA, thereby affecting performance. Although surface area measured by BET can be informative, it may not fully represent the electroactive surface. Conductive additives may activate previously inaccessible regions of the catalyst by overcoming conductivity limitations.
Given the challenges of reliable area normalization, ranking catalysts based on intensive quantities is preferable. One example is the adsorption energy of key intermediates. Recent studies show that such energies can be integrated into microkinetic models and extracted through fitting to polarization curves.143,144
The literature often treats Tafel slope as a proxy for catalytic activity, implying that lower slopes indicate more active catalysts.20,97 However, this assumption lacks robust support, especially given variations in testing conditions. For example, the same catalyst can exhibit drastically different behaviour in different electrolytes.145 Oversimplified polarization curve analyses can misrepresent the electrocatalytic mechanism.48 Tafel slopes are traditionally used to evaluate kinetics and deduce the rate-determining step, often based on the assumption of either full or negligible adsorbate coverage. Yet, in practice, Tafel slopes are often influenced by variable coverage, making such assumptions invalid.48
For many proposed mechanisms, more than one linear region may be expected in the polarization curve, as shown in classic studies by Bockris and co-workers.43,44 Moreover, in catalysis research, significant current can be observed even at low overpotentials. Not all mechanisms exhibit classic Tafel behaviour.146 As such, direct fitting of polarization curves to microkinetic models represents a more rigorous alternative.143,144,146,147
Watzele and Bandarenka proposed a fast and facile method to determine the ECSA of electronically conducting oxides and perovskites,148 which could be well suited for pyrochlores. Their method leverages specifically adsorbed OER intermediates (at low overpotentials) to determine the adsorption capacitance, Ca, analogous to approaches used in CO adsorption or hydrogen underpotential deposition. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) is used to extract Ca, which is assumed to be related to the surface coverage of adsorbates through
![]() | (33) |
While some publications do not mention A-site redox transitions, others do. Prakash et al. observed an increasing anodic current with superimposed small peaks and a broad cathodic peak.70 These features were attributed to successive surface Ru oxidation events and possible Pb oxidation. Ten Kortenaar et al. clearly identified A-site redox features in CVs of several iridate pyrochlores.65 In Pb2(PbxIr2−x)O7−y, a small capacitive background and several quasi-reversible peaks were observed, including a doublet between −1.1 and −0.85 V vs. SSE, attributed to Ir3+/Ir4+ and an unidentified process (only visible under Ar). Peaks at −0.33 V and −0.13 V vs. SSE were assigned to Ir4+/Ir5+ and Pb2+/Pb4+. In Eu2Ir2O7, similar transitions (Eu2+/Eu3+) were proposed but less pronounced. Bi2Ir2O7 also showed a distinct doublet with Ir4+/Ir5+ shifted positively. CVs for Bi- and Nd-based pyrochlores yielded irreversible cathodic peaks or none at all, correlating with reduced OER activity and suggesting that A-site redox activity may enhance performance.65
Prakash et al. noted that CV features depend heavily on cycling history and synthesis conditions, complicating interpretation.71 While the observed charge is likely due to multiple Ru redox transitions, the sweep-rate dependence was minimal—unlike typical RuO2 behaviour. In a recent study, CVs of Tb2Ru2O7 (and related pyrochlores) displayed two peaks at 0.7 and 1.1 V vs. RHE, assigned to Ru3+/Ru4+ and Ru4+/Ru6+ transitions.126 Notably, overoxidation to Ru8+ (as seen in RuO2 and SrRuO3 at ∼1.35 V) was not observed in the pyrochlore, indicating enhanced stability.126
Most studies prioritise electrocatalyst activity over long-term stability,152,153 yet the latter is crucial for large-scale applications, particularly in PEM water electrolysis (PEMWE). Chen et al. demonstrated that a catalyst with lower activity but higher stability can cut energy costs by 43% after 2000 hours of operation.153 Interestingly, activity and stability are often inversely correlated.60,152–154
Several comprehensive reviews outline OER electrocatalyst stability, including the mechanisms of degradation/deactivation, figures of merit, strategies to improve the stability and how to effectively analyse stability.152–155 Spori et al. categorise stability into material stability (e.g., Pourbaix and mechanical stability, crystallinity) and operational stability (e.g., support passivation, dissolution, particle growth).152 Feng et al. provides a review on the degradation of the entire PEMWE system.156
Pourbaix diagrams are an established tool for assessing thermodynamic stability at specific pH and potential. However, as electrochemical systems often operate far from thermodynamic equilibrium, these diagrams are not always predictive of observed stability.157 They can be useful as a predictive and interpretative tools,153,157 though other factors—such as transient dissolution, metastable phases, strain, and interfacial effects should be considered.157
Stability enhancement strategies include doping/alloying, morphological tuning, and support selection.152 This section addresses these aspects, the mechanisms underlying electrocatalyst degradation, key evaluation considerations, and specific insights into pyrochlore behaviour.
Whether an electrocatalyst follows LOM depends on composition, structure, defects, and crystallinity.153 OER at RuO2 is usually believed to proceed through LOM, but Stoerzinger et al. showed that it is not observed on crystalline RuO2 surfaces that are still very active.159 This challenges the belief that activity and stability are unequivocally linked, and shows that tuning factors like crystallinity could optimise both.153
LOM does not necessarily equate instability since the oxides can reach a metastable state. Instead of dissolving, the metal ion recombines with hydroxide anions and returns to its initial state, closing the cycle. Thus stability is possible if recombination is favoured over dissolution. This can be engineered by reducing the oxygen mobility or replacing oxygen with an anion that is less easily oxidised.151,152 The structure can also be tuned so that coordinate structures under the surface layer stabilise the lattice oxygen.153
Rong et al. discuss a third mechanism, the oxide path mechanism (OPM), in which only Oad and OHad act as intermediates, allowing direct O–O coupling without oxygen vacancy formation.155,160 Lattice oxygen is not involved, and the mechanism requires specific configurations of active sites.155
Pyrochlores are commonly engineered with oxygen vacancies to favour LOM.62,91,114 Excessive vacancies can compromise stability through amorphisation and dissolution.60 Adjusting the A-site to upshift the O 2p band center enhances metal–oxygen hybridization and promotes the AEM-to-LOM transition.104 Conversely, lowering the O 2p band center can improve stability by circumventing LOM.110 In another example, fluoride doping of (Ir0.3Sn0.3Nb0.3)O2 was used to shift the d-band center downward, mimicking the electronic structure of IrO2, thereby increasing activity while maintaining stability.161 These cases demonstrate that modifying the electronic structure can be an effective strategy to tune both OER activity and stability, and that these factors are not always linked.
Dissolution can be categorised as chemical, electrochemical and transient.154 Chen et al. classifies dissolution as transient and steady-state (constant potential).153 Chemical dissolution occurs through interactions between electrocatalysts and components or impurities in the electrolyte/electrolyser, such as acid–base reactions with protons that destabilise first-row transition metal oxides.154 However, it is not only these metals that are subject to chemical dissolution. Zeng et al. summarise multiple studies where the chemical dissolution of Ir has been observed from mixed oxides.154
Electrochemical dissolution is subject to an applied potential forming unstable species and can be reductive or oxidative.154 The latter is most prominent in OER electrocatalysts. Potentials applied during the OER lead to the formation of unstable species, like volatile RuO4 that forms when RuO2 is subjected to potentials above 1.4 V according to the eqn (34):152,154
| RuO2 + 2H2O → RuO4 + 4H+ + 4e− | (34) |
OER and dissolution both take place through the formation of RuO4 as a common intermediate and it is the stability of another intermediate (RuO2(OH)2) that determines if RuO4 corrodes or produces O2 and RuO2(OH)2.162 Ir incorporation into RuO2 increased the stability by reducing Ru dissolution, but the inherent Ir stability was decreased.142 Distinct oxidative dissolution mechanisms, which are not yet fully understood, can be observed when different facets, substrates or reaction potentials are considered.153 In some cases, such as shut-down or start-up of electrolyser systems, reductive dissolution might also be relevant.154
Transient dissolution occurs under potentiodynamic polarisation, where local pH changes and phase transitions are apparent.157 Fluctuating potential disrupts the crystal structure via oxidation/reduction, during which oxygen atoms are inserted or removed and/or metastable phases form.154 These phases are difficult to characterise and may enhance activity at the cost of stability.157 Transient dissolution for Ir and Ru electrocatalysts take place via oxidation/reduction of RuO2 and reduction of Ir to unstable metallic complexes.154
Chen et al. define transient dissolution as surface restructuring prior to steady-state dissolution. For Ru, steady-state dissolution dominates, while transient dissolution is more pronounced for Ir and Pt.153,158 Notably, transient dissolution of Ru-based catalysts have occurred below the OER onset, implying surface redox reactions also contribute to instability.153 Furthermore, oxidative (anodic) and reductive (cathodic) transient dissolution correlate with M–M and M–O bond strength, respectively.157 Since transient dissolution arises during oxidation to oxides/(oxy)hydroxides, directly preparing these phases can reduce its extent.153 Strain also plays a critical role: oxidation/reduction and intermediate adsorption induce local lattice strain, altering the lattice constant and electronic structure, thereby influencing stability.157 When potential shifts outpace structural relaxation, strain can accumulate and exacerbate degradation.157
Dissolved species may redeposit via three pathways: phase segregation, active-phase reconstruction, and dynamically stable active sites.153 The first generally reduces activity, while the latter two enhance it. Active-phase reconstruction, typically a dissolution–redeposition process, can also be tuned via dopants or temperature.153 Particle growth may also result from redeposition, though Ostwald ripening and coalescence also contribute.152 Redeposition depends on operating potential and ion concentration, and balancing dissolution and redeposition rates can lead to dynamic stability.153 However, in circulating electrolytes (e.g., full cells), ions are flushed out, limiting redeposition, unlike in 3-electrode setups.152,153 This highlights the difference between full- and half-cell testing. Moreover, isotope labelling used to confirm LOM, might detect dissolution–redeposition pathways instead.153
Dissolution of active and inactive ions, along with surface restructuring, is widely reported for pyrochlores. Prakash et al. linked OER degradation in lead ruthenates to Ru and Pb loss, attributed to low crystallinity and residual RuO2 and PbO phases.71 Applying a conductive ionomer overlayer mitigated dissolution.71 Lebedev observed Y leaching from a pyrochlore, forming active IrO2 on the surface.89 Similarly, A-site cation loss (e.g., Ca and Na) has been reported without compromising structure or activity since charge neutrality was maintained via proton incorporation as bridging hydroxyls.69 Galyamin et al. detected surface reconstruction in R2MnRuO7 (R = Y, Tb, Dy) pyrochlores through hysteresis in initial voltammograms that diminished with continued cycling, accompanied by rising OER activity.117 Hubert et al. concluded that all pyrochlores studied were thermodynamically unstable under OER conditions, and reported varied stabilities across studies.99 They ascribe this to non-standardised methods to assess stability and emphasise the need to measure dissolution in parallel with OER activity.99
The interaction between catalyst and support, ranging from weak electrostatic forces to strong chemical bonds, influences catalyst adhesion and stability.152 These interactions also modify electron density and impact activity. Strong support-catalyst binding may lower the metal oxidation state via charge donation, thereby suppressing metal dissolution during OER.152,164 A study on IrOx found that supported nanocatalysts were more active but less stable, where carbon proved to be the least stable support and annealing unsupported IrOx offered a better balance between stability and activity.165
How the catalyst is adhered to the support is important, and methods include binders and co-crystallisation.152,166 For pyrochlores, carbon-based supports are predominantly employed. Glassy carbon (GC) rotating disk electrodes (RDEs) are commonly used in three-electrode configurations,62,101,102 often in conjunction with additives like acetylene black,67,68,97 activated carbon,120,121 carbon black,116,118 or Vulcan 72.37,122 Carbon paper87 and rotating ring-disk electrodes (RRDEs) with a GC disk and Pt ring are also used.100 RRDEs allow concurrent monitoring of OER activity and catalyst dissolution.
Certain anions will have a stronger interaction with the catalytic sites and could significantly impact the performance as shown by Owe et al.145 (e.g. use of HClO4 compared to H3PO4) Furthermore, impure electrolytes containing small amounts of metal cations such as Mn, Pb and Co could lead to simultaneous formation of oxides at catalytic sites.167 Dissolved cations can also block conductive H+-sites in the ionomer.69
A decline in activity may result from various mechanisms: passivation, detachment, dissolution, surface blocking, or agglomeration, each with different implications.163 Complementary techniques such as CV and EIS should be used, but Spöri et al. found that only a third of PEM studies included such analyses.152 EIS provides insights into ohmic resistance (Rs) and charge transfer resistance (Rct), which can indicate passivation or structural changes, respectively.154
There is currently no standardised protocol to probe deactivation mechanisms. Thorough pre- and post-characterisation via techniques such as XRF, XRD, SEM-EDX, (S)TEM, APT, Raman, and XPS is essential to track compositional and morphological changes.152,153 Mass losses can be assessed using electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance (EQCM) or inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). These enable calculation of the stability number (S-number), the ratio of evolved O2 to dissolved active material.168 The S-number is independent of catalyst loading and surface area, providing a meaningful measure of intrinsic stability.153,154 Another useful metric is the activity-stability factor (ASF), which indicates the ratio between the OER- and dissolution current densities.154
Stability testing is most often done in half-cells. Chen et al. recommend long (hundreds of hours) CA or CP, combined with dissolution analysis, as the most reliable approach.153 In a three-electrode cell, 10 mA cm−2 is a commonly accepted benchmark. The current density may be reported relative to the geometric or electrochemically active surface area, with the latter being more meaningful but harder to obtain.
Accelerated lifetime tests (ASTs) using CVs are widely applied, especially for ORR catalysts.152 Chen et al. note that while extensive cycling reflects start-up/shut-down behaviour, it should not be the sole indicator of stability due to structural redox changes.153 Zeng et al. describe a case where CA showed activity loss while CV suggested stability attributed to cathodic sweeps reversing anodic degradation.154,169 Nonetheless, Spöri et al. suggest that selecting appropriate potential limits can prevent irreversible changes.152 CV results depend on scan rate and potential range, complicating comparisons.153 CP is also limited by fluctuating potentials that affect electrooxidative conditions depending on catalyst activity, unlike CA.154 A combination of CA, CP, and CV is thus advisable.154
Stability testing of pyrochlores varies widely. Some studies combine cycling (e.g., 1500 cycles at 100 mV s−1 from 1.4–1.6 V in 0.5 M H2SO4) with CP,68,117 or CV (2000 cycles, 1.35–1.6 V) with CA at 1 mA cm−2 for 8.5 hours.67 Others use only CP (1.5 V, 20 hours),98 or only CA.119 Several also combine galvanostatic holds with ICP-MS to quantify dissolved species.62 Full-cell testing has also been employed.67–69,97,117 Burnett et al. used mass spectrometry to directly monitor oxygen evolution.69 This analysis would enable the use of the S-number.
A standardised OER stability protocol was proposed by Spöri et al., applicable to both half- and full-cell testing.152 The protocol begins with two potential cycles (from 1.23 V vs. RHE to the potential yielding 20 mA cm−2), followed by redox and surface area analysis via CV (50 mV s−1) and EIS. The first two cycles are then repeated before a series of CP steps from 0.1–20 mA cm−2 (10 minutes each) is performed, followed by galvanostatic stability testing at 20 mA cm−2 for 24 hours. These steps are repeated to assess changes after stability testing. These tests should be at 80 °C and 1600 rpm (for RDE), and full-cell tests should have a flow ratio of 3. In a full cell, galvanostatic testing at 1 A cm−2 for 24 hours is suggested for pre-screening (to compare with published results), followed by full validation at 2 A cm−2.152 Since real-life operation (20
000–50
000 hours) cannot be directly assessed, ASTs such as CV or square-wave voltammetry (0.05–1.4 V) are recommended.152
Fundamental differences exist between half-cell and full electrolyser testing. Variations in pH, applied potential, support materials, and ionomer content may alter surface reconstructions or introduce morphological/electronic differences.153 The ionomer, acting as both binder and ionic conductor, must be carefully dosed since too much blocks active sites and impedes mass transfer, and too little increases resistance.153
i plots over at least a decade, it becomes important to have as wide a data range as possible for fitting to models (see below). Furthermore, we recommend the use of CVs at different scan rates (from 50–500 mV s−1) in the non-faradaic region to determine the double layer capacitance. This can then be divided by a specific capacitance value of 0.35 mF cm−2 (ref. 170) to obtain ECSA, which we recommend to normalise the OER activity. This is used instead of the geometric area to enable comparisons across different labs.
Microkinetic models can be used to evaluate intensive parameters related to the adsorption of intermediates on the surface, providing information independent of testing conditions, loading, or catalyst surface area.143 An overview of the reaction mechanisms was provided in Section 2.4. These mechanisms can be converted to mathematical expressions for current density, as detailed in works by Marshall et al.,146,147 Shinagawa et al.,48 Reksten et al.,143 and Scott et al.144 Many proposed reaction schemes can be fitted into the scheme proposed by Giordano et al.,171 as a sequence of concerted or separate proton and electron transfers. Reksten et al.143 derived a general expression for this scheme, allowing computation of any reaction pathway within it. For solid solutions of IrO2 and RuO2, the data fit well to eqn (35) (describing the CC mechanism outlined by Reksten et al.), both in terms of reaction order and current–potential behaviour.
![]() | (35) |
Fits to eqn (35) can be performed in terms of the pre-exponential factor in the numerator, the transfer coefficient α, and the constant K1. The latter can be related to the energy of adsorption for oxygen through the scaling relations introduced in Section 2.4, as described by Reksten et al.143
![]() | (36) |
However, owing to the scaling relations and hence the ratios between rate constants for the forward and reverse directions of the rate equations they dictate, equally good fits should be expected for a model assuming the third reaction step to be rds. We refer to this model as the CCC model in line with the reference, for which the current is given by
![]() | (37) |
As discussed in ref. 143, the scaling relations imply that K1 ≪ K2, the last term in the denominator becomes negligible, and the equation attains the same form as eqn (35). In this case, K2 becomes the relevant constant from which the binding energy must be evaluated,143
![]() | (38) |
As an example of the application of this to pyrochlores, we fitted the curves reported by Kim et al. for Y2Ru2−xCoxO7 with both the CC, eqn (35), and CCC, eqn (37) mechanisms outlined by Reksten et al.143 The fit to the eqn (37) is shown in Fig. 16. The polarization data reported by Kim et al. do not appear to display any straight sections and therefore elude a straightforward assignment of a Tafel slope.94 However, fitting eqn (37) to the same data sets appears to by and large capture their shape to a much higher degree. Ideally, these fits should have been performed over a much wider range. The binding energy values obtained by the fits were approximately equal to 2.3 eV for all data sets: IrO2 2.26 eV, YCRO 2.28 eV, YCRO-510 2.37 eV and YCRO-610 2.31 eV. In Section 2.4, we have shown that an oxygen binding energy of 2.3 eV corresponds to the third step being rate-determining, which is consistent with the CCC model used in this case. The corresponding fits to the CC model, eqn (35), also gave more or less similar binding energies ΔEO, but now equal to 3.4 eV. In view of the rather high value for the latter model as compared to the theoretically computed values,45 we tend to prefer the CCC model, eqn (37).
![]() | ||
| Fig. 16 The CCC equation143 (eqn 37) fitted to values of electrode potential vs. logarithm of current density for YRCO, YRCO-X, and IrOx from Kim et al. 2019.94,143 | ||
For the data provided in Fig. 16, we somewhat surprisingly found very similar values for the binding energy for all the data sets, viz. 2.3 eV. With some reservation concerning the accuracy of the model and the scaling relations employed, this is what would result if the catalysts were to differ only in the electrochemical surface area per geometric surface area and not in the intrinsic activity, i.e. activity per electrochemical surface area. In order to reach a more definitive conclusion, however, a wider range of currents would be necessary. This highlights the importance of (1) expanding the range of currents and potentials to the widest possible and (2) using more complete, multistep kinetic models in the interpretation.
We also note in passing that when scaling relations are introduced into microkinetic models as in eqn (36) and (38), the result is inconsistent with the data; with ΔEO = 2.3 eV eqn (37) predicts a transition from a low Tafel slope of approximately 40 mV to a slope of 120 mV at an electrode potential of approximately 1.55 V, which happens also be the onset potential for the OER according to Fig. 6(b). In other words, according to the combination of microkinetics and the scaling relations, one should not observe slopes in the E vs. log
i curves lower than 120 mV. We are not aware of any attempts to resolve this conflict.
To evaluate stability, we recommend LSV and ECSA measurements after different cycling regimes and potential holds to understand how the activity and active area changes. We recommend using a combination of cycling in the OER region and potential holds, since the electrocatalyst might behave differently when cycled compared to when it is kept at a single potential. Furthermore, we recommend cycling in a lower potential region (between 0.2–1.3 V) to evaluate if this regenerates the catalyst. Since pyrochlores have been shown to reorganise the surface structure under these conditions, cycling in a lower potential region could lead to regained activity. We recommend the use of ICP-MS after each test to correlate the dissolution of elements to the stability trends. We also recommend the use of physical characterisation techniques such as SEM-EDX, XRD, Raman spectroscopy and XPS before and after stability tests to see how the structure and composition changes with testing.
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