Unveiling the Critical Role of Strain-Induced Local Structure Changes in Co-N4 Single-Atom Catalysts for Enhanced Oxygen Reduction and Evolution Reactions

Abstract

The rational design of cost-effective bifunctional catalysts for the oxygen reduction and oxygen evolution reactions remains a key bottleneck in advancing sustainable energy technologies.Using comprehensive density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we systematically elucidate how strain-induced structural perturbations govern the intrinsic activity of singleatom catalysts (SACs). Our results reveal that although the local coordination environment (e.g., pyridinic N vs. pyrrolic N) plays a primary role in determining activity, maximal bifunctional performance is achieved through precise control of metal-nitrogen ligand distances via applied directional strain. Free-energy landscape analysis identifies the formation of the OOH * intermediate as the common rate-determining step for both oxygen reduction and evolution, yielding an exceptionally low theoretical overpotential under optimal strain. Electronic-structure decomposition further shows that the strain-induced shift of the metal dorbital center fine-tunes the adsorption of oxygen intermediates relative to the Fermi level. This work establishes a quantitative, atomistic correlation linking strain, electronic structure, and catalytic turnover, providing a powerful strain-based descriptor for the rational design of nonprecious-metal electrocatalysts.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Nov 2025
Accepted
15 Mar 2026
First published
17 Mar 2026

Nanoscale, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Unveiling the Critical Role of Strain-Induced Local Structure Changes in Co-N4 Single-Atom Catalysts for Enhanced Oxygen Reduction and Evolution Reactions

Y. Yang, S. Lee and J. Kang, Nanoscale, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5NR04959H

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