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Redox

About: Redox is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 26853 publications have been published within this topic receiving 862368 citations. The topic is also known as: reduction-oxidation & reduction-oxidation reaction.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors reveal that the voltage of anion redox is strongly affected by structural changes that occur during battery cycling, explaining its unique electrochemical properties.
Abstract: Lithium-rich layered transition metal oxide positive electrodes offer access to anion redox at high potentials, thereby promising high energy densities for lithium-ion batteries. However, anion redox is also associated with several unfavorable electrochemical properties, such as open-circuit voltage hysteresis. Here we reveal that in Li1.17-x Ni0.21Co0.08Mn0.54O2, these properties arise from a strong coupling between anion redox and cation migration. We combine various X-ray spectroscopic, microscopic, and structural probes to show that partially reversible transition metal migration decreases the potential of the bulk oxygen redox couple by > 1 V, leading to a reordering in the anionic and cationic redox potentials during cycling. First principles calculations show that this is due to the drastic change in the local oxygen coordination environments associated with the transition metal migration. We propose that this mechanism is involved in stabilizing the oxygen redox couple, which we observe spectroscopically to persist for 500 charge/discharge cycles.

434 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a scalable metal organic framework-derived Fe-N-C catalyst with high ORR activity demonstrated in practical H2/air fuel cells, and an unprecedented turnover frequency (TOF) in acid in rotating disk electrode.
Abstract: The development of efficient non-platinum group metal (non-PGM) catalysts for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is of paramount importance for clean and sustainable energy storage and conversion devices. The major bottleneck in developing Fe–N–C materials as the leading non-PGM catalysts lies in the poor understanding of the nature of active sites and reaction mechanisms. Herein, we report a scalable metal organic framework-derived Fe–N–C catalyst with high ORR activity demonstrated in practical H2/air fuel cells, and an unprecedented turnover frequency (TOF) in acid in rotating disk electrode. By characterizing the catalyst under both ex situ and operando conditions using combined microscopic and spectroscopic techniques, we show that the structures of active sites under ex situ and working conditions are drastically different. Resultantly, the active site proposed here, a non-planar ferrous Fe–N4 moiety embedded in distorted carbon matrix characterized by a high Fe2+/3+ redox potential, is in contrast with those proposed hitherto derived from ex situ characterizations. This site reversibly switches to an in-plane ferric Fe–N4 moiety poisoned by oxygen adsorbates during the redox transition, with the population of active sites controlled by the Fe2+/3+ redox potential. The unprecedented TOF of the active site is correlated to its near-optimal Fe2+/3+ redox potential, and essentially originated from its favorable biomimetic dynamic nature that balances the site-blocking effect and O2 dissociation. The porous and disordered carbon matrix of the catalyst plays pivotal roles for its measured high ORR activity by hosting high population of reactant-accessible active sites.

434 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1999-Carbon
TL;DR: In this article, a tubular carbon host with graded texture and chemical composition is used for studying the electrode processes during insertion and extraction of lithium in an aprotic medium, and the specific capacity, that is, the degree of irreversible (500 −100 −g−1) and reversible (400 −100 ¼ −g −1) insertion of lithium, has been estimated from galvanostatic charge-discharge characteristics.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the selectivity pattern and the formation rates of the reaction products are used to characterize both structural (dispersion) as well as chemical properties (acid base and redox) on supported oxide catalysts, especially for molybdenum-based systems supported on silica and vanadia on titanium oxide.
Abstract: The goal of this review is to present some aspects of the use of a test reaction, i.e., methanol oxidation, as a tool to characterize oxidation catalysts. The selectivity pattern and the formation rates of the reaction products are used to characterize both structural (dispersion) as well as chemical properties (acid-base and redox) on supported oxide catalysts, especially for molybdenum-based systems supported on silica and vanadia on titanium oxide. This highly sensitive technique which gives information on the catalytically active sites at the molecular level characterizes a catalyst at work and is particularly well-adapted to the study of supported catalysts.

428 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role played by ROS and their scavenging systems in modulation of cell function and cell death has grown exponentially over the past few years, but knowledge is still limited in how to apply this knowledge to develop its full therapeutic potential.
Abstract: The mitochondrion is a major source of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Superoxide (O2•−) is generated under specific bioenergetic conditions at several sites within the electron-transport system; most is converted to H2O2 inside and outside the mitochondrial matrix by superoxide dismutases. H2O2 is a major chemical messenger that, in low amounts and with its products, physiologically modulates cell function. The redox state and ROS scavengers largely control the emission (generation scavenging) of O2•−. Cell ischemia, hypoxia, or toxins can result in excess O2•− production when the redox state is altered and the ROS scavenger systems are overwhelmed. Too much H2O2 can combine with Fe2+ complexes to form reactive ferryl species (e.g., Fe(IV) = O•). In the presence of nitric oxide (NO•), O2•− forms the reactant peroxynitrite (ONOO−), and ONOOH-induced nitrosylation of proteins, DNA, and lipids can modify their structure and function. An initial increase in ROS can cause an even greater increase in R...

428 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20242
20233,178
20225,931
20211,509
20201,274
20191,219