Abstract

Temporally resolved spectroscopy is a powerful approach for gaining detailed mechanistic understanding of water oxidation at robust Earth-abundant metal oxide catalysts for guiding efficiency improvement of solar fuel conversion systems. Beyond detecting and structurally identifying surface intermediates by vibrational and accompanying optical spectroscopy, knowledge of how charges, sequentially delivered to the metal oxide surface, drive the four-electron water oxidation cycle is critical for enhancing catalytic efficiency. Key issues addressed in this Perspective are the experimental requirements for establishing the kinetic relevancy of observed surface species and the discovery of the rate-boosting role of encounters of two or more one-electron surface hole charges, often in the form of randomly hopping metal oxo or oxyl moieties, for accessing very low-barrier O-O bond-forming pathways. Recent spectroscopic breakthroughs of metal oxide photo- and electrocatalysts inspire future research poised to take advantage of new highly sensitive spectroscopic tools and of methods for fast catalysis triggering.

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