The spin-coupling-dependent oxygen reduction mechanism in dual-atom catalysts

Abstract

The role of electronic spin in electrocatalysis has led to the emerging field of “spin-dependent electrocatalysis”. While spin effects in individual active sites have been well understood, spin coupling among multiple sites remains underexplored in electrocatalysis, which will bring forth new active sites and mechanisms. In this work, we propose a general theory to understand the spin coupling in electrocatalysis. Inspired by spintronics, the energy of the spin-polarized bond of catalyst–adsorbate can be effectively tuned by exchange splitting, resulting in a spin-dependent mechanism. To validate this hypothesis, we take the Fe2N6 dual-atom-catalyst (DAC) with parallel and antiparallel spin (PS/APS) alignments as an example. Our calculation demonstrates that spin exchange splitting significantly determines the ORR mechanism, leading to a huge discrepancy in ORR activity in APS-Fe2N6 (UL = 1.04 V vs. SHE) and PS-Fe2N6 (UL = 0.67 V vs. SHE). We further reveal that PS alignment enhances exchange splitting and strengthens OH/O2 adsorption, while APS alignment reduces exchange splitting and weakens OH/O2 adsorption. This mechanism is further validated with other bi-metallic DACs. Our work first unravels how spin exchange splitting alters the catalytic activity and mechanism, offering significant mechanistic insights into spin-related electrocatalysis.

Graphical abstract: The spin-coupling-dependent oxygen reduction mechanism in dual-atom catalysts

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
01 Jul 2025
Accepted
25 Aug 2025
First published
26 Aug 2025
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2025, Advance Article

The spin-coupling-dependent oxygen reduction mechanism in dual-atom catalysts

M. Yu, E. Kan and C. Zhan, Chem. Sci., 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5SC04842G

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