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Calibration of Computational Mössbauer Spectroscopy to Unravel Active Sites in FeNC-Catalysts for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction
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  • Charlotte Gallenkamp,
  • Ulrike Kramm,
  • Jonny Proppe,
  • Vera Krewald
Charlotte Gallenkamp
TU Darmstadt Department of Chemistry

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Ulrike Kramm
Technical University of Darmstadt Department of Materials and Earth Sciences
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Jonny Proppe
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
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Vera Krewald
TU Darmstadt Department of Chemistry
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Abstract

Single atom catalysts with iron ions in the active site, known as FeNC catalysts, show high activity for the oxygen reduction reaction and hence hold promise for access to low cost fuel cells. Due to the amorphous, multi-phase structure of the FeNC catalysts, the iron environment and its electronic structure are poorly understood. While it is widely accepted that the catalytically active site contains an iron ion ligated by several nitrogen donors embedded in a graphene-like plane, the exact structural details such as the presence or nature of axial ligands are unknown. Computational chemistry in combination with Mössbauer spectroscopy can help to unravel the geometric and electronic structures of the active sites. As a first step towards this goal, we present a calibration of computational Mössbauer spectroscopy for FeN4-like environments. The uncertainty of both the isomer shift and the quadrupole splitting prediction is determined, from which trust regions for the Mössbauer parameter predictions of computational FeNC models are derived. We find that TPSSh, B3LYP, and PBE0 perform equally well; the trust regions with B3LYP are 0.13 mm s−1 for the isomer shift and 0.45 mm s−1 for the quadrupole splitting. The calibration data is made publicly available in an interactive notebook that provides predicted Mössbauer parameters with individual uncertainty estimates from computed contact densities and quadrupole splitting values. We show that a differentiation of common FeNC Mössbauer signals by a separate analysis of isomer shift and quadrupole splitting will most likely be insufficient, whereas their simultaneous evaluation will allow the assignment to adequate computational FeNC models.
11 May 2020Submitted to International Journal of Quantum Chemistry
11 May 2020Submission Checks Completed
11 May 2020Assigned to Editor
26 May 2020Reviewer(s) Assigned
09 Jun 2020Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
10 Jun 2020Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
26 Jun 20201st Revision Received
26 Jun 2020Submission Checks Completed
26 Jun 2020Assigned to Editor
29 Jun 2020Reviewer(s) Assigned
29 Jun 2020Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
29 Jun 2020Editorial Decision: Accept
05 Feb 2021Published in International Journal of Quantum Chemistry volume 121 issue 3. 10.1002/qua.26394