TY - JOUR
T1 - Symmetry breaking of single-atom catalysts in heterogeneous electrocatalysis
T2 - reactivity and configuration
AU - Wu, Bin
AU - Chen, Zuohuan
AU - Ye, Yifan
AU - Seow, Justin Zhu Yeow
AU - Mandler, Daniel
AU - Fisher, Adrian
AU - Wang, Dingsheng
AU - Guo, Shaojun
AU - Xu, Zhichuan J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Royal Society of Chemistry
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Single-atom catalysts (SACs) have emerged as transformative materials in heterogeneous electrocatalysis, yet their conventional symmetric coordination environments often yield suboptimal catalytic efficacy. This review systematically examines the deliberate disruption of local symmetry as a powerful design strategy to precisely tailor the electronic properties of SACs. We categorize and analyze atomic-level modulation approaches, including strain-induced lattice distortion, defect-engineered coordination tailoring, and curvature-derived interfacial fields, demonstrating how these strategies effectively break the intrinsic symmetry of motifs such as M–N4. Our analysis reveals that such symmetry breaking redistributes electron density around the metal center, lifts orbital degeneracy, and optimizes the d-band center, leading to enhanced intermediate adsorption, accelerated reaction kinetics, and broken scaling relationships. Furthermore, these asymmetrically configured SACs exhibit improved stability through strengthened metal–support interactions. While significant progress has been made, we conclude that future efforts must address the challenges of atomic-level precision, stability under operation, and scalable synthesis to fully realize the potential of symmetry-broken SACs across various electrocatalytic applications, thereby establishing a new paradigm for the rational design of advanced electrocatalytic materials.
AB - Single-atom catalysts (SACs) have emerged as transformative materials in heterogeneous electrocatalysis, yet their conventional symmetric coordination environments often yield suboptimal catalytic efficacy. This review systematically examines the deliberate disruption of local symmetry as a powerful design strategy to precisely tailor the electronic properties of SACs. We categorize and analyze atomic-level modulation approaches, including strain-induced lattice distortion, defect-engineered coordination tailoring, and curvature-derived interfacial fields, demonstrating how these strategies effectively break the intrinsic symmetry of motifs such as M–N4. Our analysis reveals that such symmetry breaking redistributes electron density around the metal center, lifts orbital degeneracy, and optimizes the d-band center, leading to enhanced intermediate adsorption, accelerated reaction kinetics, and broken scaling relationships. Furthermore, these asymmetrically configured SACs exhibit improved stability through strengthened metal–support interactions. While significant progress has been made, we conclude that future efforts must address the challenges of atomic-level precision, stability under operation, and scalable synthesis to fully realize the potential of symmetry-broken SACs across various electrocatalytic applications, thereby establishing a new paradigm for the rational design of advanced electrocatalytic materials.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105022291983
U2 - 10.1039/d5cs00209e
DO - 10.1039/d5cs00209e
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C2 - 41269715
AN - SCOPUS:105022291983
SN - 0306-0012
JO - Chemical Society Reviews
JF - Chemical Society Reviews
ER -