Divergent A-Site Regulation Mechanisms in Rare-Earth and Alkaline-Earth Nickelates for Unlocking Bifunctional Oxygen Electrocatalysis

Abstract

The rational design of efficient, cost-effective bifunctional electrocatalysts for the oxygen reduction and evolution reactions (ORR/OER) is crucial for renewable energy technologies. Perovskite nickelates (ANiO 3 ), with their highly tunable A-site, hold significant promise, yet a comparative understanding of how different A-site cation families-specifically rare-earth (La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu) versus alkaline-earth (Ca, Sr, Ba) ions-govern the catalytic mechanisms remains incomplete. Herein, through systematic DFT+U calculations, we decipher the divergent A-site regulation mechanisms in these nickelates, focusing on their (001) surfaces with BO (Ni-O) and AO terminations (exposing A-O bonds). We reveal that the BO termination (exposing Ni-O octahedra) universally enables superior bifunctional activity due to balanced intermediate adsorption energies (-2.5 to -1.8 eV), whereas the AO termination typically leads to adsorption imbalance and inferior performance. Crucially, two distinct regulatory paradigms are uncovered: in alkaline-earth nickelates, a linear "ionic radius → Ni-O bond length → d-band center → *OH adsorption → OER activity" pathway dominates, with BaNiO 3 emerging as the optimal OER catalyst (η OER = 0.57 V). In contrast, rare-earth nickelates are governed by a volcano-type regulation, where the f-electron count synergistically modulates the d-/p-band centers and cooperates with the e g orbital occupancy (optimal range: 2.3-2.4) to achieve balanced O/OOH adsorption, rendering EuNiO 3 the top-performing bifunctional catalyst (η ORR /η OER = 0.56/0.48 V). Bader charge analysis identifies balanced charge transfer as the electronic origin of peak activity. This work establishes a complete "A-site characteristics → electronic structure → bonding → activity" framework, unlocking the design principles for high-performance perovskite oxygen electrocatalysts through element-specific mechanistic insights.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Mar 2026
Accepted
17 Apr 2026
First published
20 Apr 2026

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Divergent A-Site Regulation Mechanisms in Rare-Earth and Alkaline-Earth Nickelates for Unlocking Bifunctional Oxygen Electrocatalysis

T. Liu, Y. Dou, T. Ouyang, S. Ma, Z. Tian, Z. Peng, X. He, W. Tao, Y. Niu and W. Lv, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6TA01907B

To request permission to reproduce material from this article, please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

If you are an author contributing to an RSC publication, you do not need to request permission provided correct acknowledgement is given.

If you are the author of this article, you do not need to request permission to reproduce figures and diagrams provided correct acknowledgement is given. If you want to reproduce the whole article in a third-party publication (excluding your thesis/dissertation for which permission is not required) please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

Read more about how to correctly acknowledge RSC content.

Social activity

Spotlight

Advertisements