By Akshatha ChandrashekarApr 29 2026
An electrode’s electronic density of states can directly change the reorganization energy that governs interfacial electron transfer, giving researchers a more complete way to explain and tune charge-transfer rates.
Study: Electronic origin of reorganization energy in interfacial electron transfer. Image Credit: Simon Kadula/Shutterstock.com
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Electron transfer drives processes from catalysis and energy conversion to sensing. Standard models describe electron-transfer rates in terms of driving force and reorganization energy, the energy needed to rearrange the system during charge transfer.
At solid-liquid interfaces, that reorganization energy has usually been attributed mainly to the solvent or electrolyte.
The new study in Nature argues that the electrode itself plays a much larger role. Using atomically engineered graphene-based heterostructures, the researchers show that the electrode’s electronic density of states, or DOS, influences reorganization energy directly, not only the number of electronic states available for transfer.
That helps explain why conventional models often fail to match measured electron-transfer rates at complex interfaces.
Nanoscale System Tunes DOS
To test the effect of electrode electronic structure, the team built van der Waals heterostructures from monolayer graphene, hexagonal boron nitride, and dopant layers based on RuCl3 and WSe2.
The design allowed them to tune graphene’s charge carrier density without disrupting the material’s structural order.
The main control parameter was the thickness of the hBN spacer layer. Changing that thickness altered charge transfer between graphene and the dopant layer, which in turn tuned the DOS at the Fermi level. The team then measured electron-transfer kinetics with scanning electrochemical cell microscopy, or SECCM.
They used a well-characterized outer-sphere redox couple so that changes in kinetics could be tied mainly to electrode electronic properties rather than adsorption or other surface-specific effects. Raman spectroscopy and Hall measurements were used to quantify carrier density.
The researchers also found evidence that, in ultrathin hBN spacers, defect-mediated charge transfer may contribute to the unusually strong doping seen in that regime.
Why Electron-Transfer Rates Change
The key finding of the paper is that electron-transfer rates increase strongly with DOS, but not mainly because a higher DOS provides more thermally accessible electronic states. The paper shows that this conventional explanation predicts only modest rate enhancement and does not match the experimental data.
Instead, the dominant effect comes from reorganization energy. As DOS rises, the electrode behaves more like a metal and screens electric fields more effectively. That stronger screening localizes the induced charge more sharply, stabilizes the charge-transfer transition state, and lowers the activation barrier.
At low DOS, screening is weaker, induced charge is more diffuse, and reorganization energy increases. That raises the activation barrier and slows electron transfer. At high DOS, the opposite happens: screening strengthens, reorganization energy falls, and rates increase. The study identifies the Thomas-Fermi screening length as a key parameter linking carrier density to this behavior.
The authors also connect the effect to image-potential localization within the electrode, showing that the way the electrode redistributes charge in response to a nearby redox ion can become a major part of the electron-transfer barrier.
Reorganization Energy
One of the study’s main conclusions is that, at low charge carrier densities, the electrode can add a reorganization-energy penalty comparable to that arising in the solvent at a metallic electrode.
That challenges the long-standing assumption that solvent-side effects dominate heterogeneous electron-transfer kinetics.
The work does not discard the standard Marcus picture. Rather, it shows that for low-DOS and low-dimensional electrodes, the electrode’s own electronic and dielectric response must be included explicitly to describe the activation barrier accurately.
The Importance of this Control
The findings are especially relevant for low-dimensional and semiconducting materials, where DOS can be tuned precisely. In those systems, relatively small changes in electronic structure can produce large changes in charge-transfer behavior.
That makes the work relevant to photo-induced charge transfer, electrochemical energy systems, sensing, and quantum technologies that depend on controlled interfacial charge flow.
The study offers a clearer framework for linking DOS, dielectric screening, and reorganization energy in nanoscale electrochemistry.
In summary, the paper shows that tuning electrode DOS can adjust the reorganization energy and, with it, electron-transfer rates. That gives researchers a sharper way to think about charge transfer at interfaces and a more direct route to designing better electrochemical materials.
Journal Reference
Maroo, S., et al. (2026). Electronic origin of reorganization energy in interfacial electron transfer. Nature,1-6. DOI:10.1038/s41586-026-10311-2
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