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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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The use of IR spectroscopic techniques to provide information on the mechanisms of catalytic oxidation over metal oxide catalysts is briefly discussed in this paper, where generalized mechanisms of these complex oxidation reactions are proposed and the catalyst features affecting selectivities in these reactions are discussed.

267 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the reduction of synthetic birnessite (MnO1.7(OH)0.95) by arsenious acid (H3AsO3) proceeds in two steps.

267 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The increased reducibility of cy tochrome b induced by antimycin plus oxidant is considered to be the result of two effects: inhibition of oxidation of ferrocytochrome b by ferricytochrome c1 (the effect of antimyzin), and oxidation of the semiquinone form of a two-equivalent redox couple such as ubiquinone/ubiquinol by the added oxidant, leading to a decreased redox potential of the QH

266 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new framework model of catalysis in an amorphous, hydrated and volume-active oxide is proposed: within the oxide film, cobalt ions at the margins of Co-oxo fragments undergo CoII↔ CoIII ↔ CoIV oxidation-state changes coupled to structural modification and deprotonation of Cooxo bridges, and an active site is formed at which the O-O bond-formation step can take place.
Abstract: Water oxidation by amorphous oxides is of high interest in artificial photosynthesis and other routes towards non-fossil fuels, but the mode of catalysis in these materials is insufficiently understood. We tracked mechanistically relevant oxidation-state and structural changes of an amorphous Co-based catalyst film by in situ experiments combining directly synchrotron-based X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) with electrocatalysis. Unlike a classical solid-state material, the bulk material is found to undergo chemical changes. Two redox transitions at midpoint potentials of about 1.0 V (CoII0.4CoIII0.6 ↔ all-CoIII) and 1.2 V (all-CoIII ↔ CoIII0.8CoIV0.2) vs. NHE at pH 7 are coupled to structural changes. These redox transitions can be induced by variation of either electric potential or pH; they are broader than predicted by a simple Nernstian model, suggesting interacting bridged cobalt ions. Tracking reaction kinetics by UV-Vis-absorption and time-resolved mass spectroscopy reveals that accumulated oxidizing equivalents facilitate dioxygen formation. On these grounds, a new framework model of catalysis in an amorphous, hydrated and volume-active oxide is proposed: Within the oxide film, cobalt ions at the margins of Co-oxo fragments undergo CoII ↔ CoIII ↔ CoIV oxidation-state changes coupled to structural modification and deprotonation of Co-oxo bridges. By the encounter of two (or more) CoIV ions, an active site is formed at which the O–O bond-formation step can take place. The Tafel slope is determined by both the interaction between cobalt ions (width of the redox transition) and their encounter probability. Our results represent a first step toward the development of new concepts that address the solid-molecular Janus nature of the amorphous oxide. Insights and concepts described herein for the Co-based catalyst film may be of general relevance also for other amorphous oxides with water-oxidation activity.

266 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A mechanistic electron spin resonance study reveals that the choice of supporting electrolytes greatly affects the chemical stability of the charged radical species especially the negative side radical anion, which dominates the cycling stability of these flow cells.
Abstract: Nonaqueous redox flow batteries hold the promise of achieving higher energy density because of the broader voltage window than aqueous systems, but their current performance is limited by low redox material concentration, cell efficiency, cycling stability, and current density. We report a new nonaqueous all-organic flow battery based on high concentrations of redox materials, which shows significant, comprehensive improvement in flow battery performance. A mechanistic electron spin resonance study reveals that the choice of supporting electrolytes greatly affects the chemical stability of the charged radical species especially the negative side radical anion, which dominates the cycling stability of these flow cells. This finding not only increases our fundamental understanding of performance degradation in flow batteries using radical-based redox species, but also offers insights toward rational electrolyte optimization for improving the cycling stability of these flow batteries.

265 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