Yang Group @ Cornell
@yaoyang-cornell.bsky.social
32 followers 49 following 8 posts
Student run account for the Yao Yang group at Cornell Chemistry; We develop operando methods to probe electrochemical dynamics at energy material interfaces
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
yaoyang-cornell.bsky.social
Kicking off the semester with a nice BBQ and hiking at the Robert H. Treman State Park!🏞️ Welcome our new postdoc, Dr. Ellis Rae Kennedy (Schmidt AI Fellow), who will work on (S)TEM methods combined with big data analysis🔬 in our group. Stay tuned for new exciting research!⚡️
yaoyang-cornell.bsky.social
Our group is attending ACS Fall 2025!🧪 Please find next the schedule of our presentations. Looking forward to seeing you there! 🤝
yaoyang-cornell.bsky.social
Our work on operando electrochemical transmission electron microscopy appears on the JACS @jacs.acspublications.org cover for July 2025! The art depicts the different growth of copper depending on the temperature as studied by the operando TEM technique. Check it out!
pubs.acs.org/toc/jacsat/1...
yaoyang-cornell.bsky.social
Summer arrived in Ithaca! 🌞 The group recently enjoyed a wonderful hike at the nearby Watkins Glen State Park with its beautiful waterfalls 🌄 We also had some fun during a great music concert at Treleaven 🎶 Cornell surroundings are plenty of possibilities this time of the year!
Reposted by Yang Group @ Cornell
Reposted by Yang Group @ Cornell
erikhthiede.bsky.social
Happy to see our first collaboration with the Yang group come through!
yaoyang-cornell.bsky.social
Who wants to study chemistry like watching movies? Operando electrochemical STEM offers a new opportunity! In our group's first publication, we probe the evolution of energy materials in real time at extreme temperatures🌡️
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
@erikhthiede.bsky.social
Operando Heating and Cooling Electrochemical 4D-STEM Probing Nanoscale Dynamics at Solid–Liquid Interfaces
Operando/in situ methods have revolutionized our fundamental understanding of molecular and structural changes at solid–liquid interfaces and enabled the vision of “watching chemistry in action”. Operando transmission electron microscopy (TEM) emerges as a powerful tool to interrogate time-resolved nanoscale dynamics, which involve local electrical fields and charge transfer kinetics distinctly different from those of their bulk counterparts. Despite early reports on electrochemical or heating liquid-cell TEM, developing operando TEM with simultaneous electrochemical and thermal control remains a formidable challenge. Here, we developed operando heating and cooling electrochemical liquid-cell scanning TEM (EC-STEM). By integrating a three-electrode electrochemical circuit and an additional two-electrode thermal circuit, we can investigate heterogeneous electrochemical kinetics across a wide temperature range of −50 to 300 °C. We used Cu electrodeposition/stripping processes as a model system to demonstrate quantitative electrochemistry from −40 to 95 °C in both transient and steady states in aqueous and organic solutions, which paves the way for investigating energy materials operating in extreme climates. Machine learning-assisted quantitative 4D-STEM structural analysis in cold liquids (−40 °C) reveals a distinct two-stage growth of nanometer-scale mossy Cu nanoislands with random orientations followed by μm-scale Cu dendrites with preferential orientations. This work benchmarked electrochemistry in the three-electrode EC-STEM and systematically investigated the temperature and pH dependence of the Pt pseudoreference electrode (RE). At room temperature, the Pt pseudo-RE shows a reliable potential of 0.8 ± 0.1 V vs the standard hydrogen electrode and remains pH-independent on the reversible hydrogen electrode scale. We anticipate that operando heating/cooling EC-STEM will become invaluable for understanding fundamental temperature-controlled nanoscale electrochemistry and advancing renewable energy technologies (e.g., catalysts and batteries) in realistic climates.
pubs.acs.org
yaoyang-cornell.bsky.social
Who wants to study chemistry like watching movies? Operando electrochemical STEM offers a new opportunity! In our group's first publication, we probe the evolution of energy materials in real time at extreme temperatures🌡️
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
@erikhthiede.bsky.social
Operando Heating and Cooling Electrochemical 4D-STEM Probing Nanoscale Dynamics at Solid–Liquid Interfaces
Operando/in situ methods have revolutionized our fundamental understanding of molecular and structural changes at solid–liquid interfaces and enabled the vision of “watching chemistry in action”. Operando transmission electron microscopy (TEM) emerges as a powerful tool to interrogate time-resolved nanoscale dynamics, which involve local electrical fields and charge transfer kinetics distinctly different from those of their bulk counterparts. Despite early reports on electrochemical or heating liquid-cell TEM, developing operando TEM with simultaneous electrochemical and thermal control remains a formidable challenge. Here, we developed operando heating and cooling electrochemical liquid-cell scanning TEM (EC-STEM). By integrating a three-electrode electrochemical circuit and an additional two-electrode thermal circuit, we can investigate heterogeneous electrochemical kinetics across a wide temperature range of −50 to 300 °C. We used Cu electrodeposition/stripping processes as a model system to demonstrate quantitative electrochemistry from −40 to 95 °C in both transient and steady states in aqueous and organic solutions, which paves the way for investigating energy materials operating in extreme climates. Machine learning-assisted quantitative 4D-STEM structural analysis in cold liquids (−40 °C) reveals a distinct two-stage growth of nanometer-scale mossy Cu nanoislands with random orientations followed by μm-scale Cu dendrites with preferential orientations. This work benchmarked electrochemistry in the three-electrode EC-STEM and systematically investigated the temperature and pH dependence of the Pt pseudoreference electrode (RE). At room temperature, the Pt pseudo-RE shows a reliable potential of 0.8 ± 0.1 V vs the standard hydrogen electrode and remains pH-independent on the reversible hydrogen electrode scale. We anticipate that operando heating/cooling EC-STEM will become invaluable for understanding fundamental temperature-controlled nanoscale electrochemistry and advancing renewable energy technologies (e.g., catalysts and batteries) in realistic climates.
pubs.acs.org