Chinese Journal of Catalysis ›› 2026, Vol. 83: 363-375.DOI: 10.1016/S1872-2067(26)64970-4

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Dynamic tuning of acidic oxygen evolution reaction pathways in Ru catalysts via Cu-induced surface restructuring

Hyunseok Yoona,1, Hee Jo Songb,1, Yumin Parka, Andi Haryantoc, Dohun Kimd, Kyuri Choe, Chanyeon Kimd, Wooyul Kime, Chan Woo Leec, Dong-Wan Kima,*()   

  1. aSchool of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, Korea University, Seoul 02841, South Korea
    bDepartment of Nanotechnology and Advanced Materials Engineering, Sejong University, Seoul 05006, South Korea
    cDepartment of Chemistry, Kookmin University, Seoul 02707, South Korea
    dDepartment of Energy Science & Engineering, DGIST, Daegu 42988, South Korea
    eDepartment of Energy Engineering, Korea Institute of Energy Technology (KENTECH), Naju, Jeollanam-do 58330, South Korea
  • Received:2025-09-11 Accepted:2025-11-04 Online:2026-04-18 Published:2026-03-04
  • Contact: Dong-Wan Kim
  • About author:First author contact:1Contributed equally to this work.

Abstract:

Achieving both high activity and long-term stability for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in acidic media remains a critical challenge for proton exchange membrane water electrolyzers (PEMWEs). In this study, we proposed a Cu-incorporated ruthenium (Ru) catalyst (CuRu-250) that exhibited superior performance via dynamic surface modulation during operation. Rather than serving solely as a static dopant, Cu actively influenced the catalyst surface by undergoing partial dissolution and inducing surface restructuring. This dynamic behavior enabled pathway tuning from the adsorbate evolution mechanism to the oxide path mechanism, enhancing the intermediate turnover and suppressing the overoxidation of Ru. Consequently, CuRu-250 demonstrated markedly improved durability and competitive activity compared to undoped Ru and commercial RuO2. Single-cell PEMWE tests validated its catalytic performance under realistic conditions. These findings highlight the role of active dopant behavior in tuning acidic OER pathways and improving electrochemical resilience, thus offering a practical strategy for advanced catalyst design.

Key words: Ruthenium, Dynamic surface restructuring, Oxygen evolution reaction, Proton exchange membrane water electrolyzer, Oxide path mechanism